Unsurprisingly, this development has prompted some countries to ban the app, including China, Venezuela, and Syria. And Cuba also saw a spike in downloads amid protests over shortages of food and medicine. Within hours of the most recent Israeli-Palestinian conflict, downloads skyrocketed to 100 times their usual rate, for example. Because Zello is a voice-first platform, it’s faster than typing and requires no literacy skills.īut recent events suggest that use of Zello is increasingly being used to connect people in areas of unrest as well. The app is also used by taxi drivers, ambulance workers, and delivery personnel who want to send hands-free voice messages, according to Raphael Varieras, Zello’s vice president of operations, says. In the US, Zello found traction in 2017’s Hurricane Harvey rescue efforts. With Wi-Fi or a data connection, people can use it to broadcast their location, share tips, and communicate with rescuers or survivors in the aftermath of a hurricane, flood, or other emergency. Zello was originally designed to help people communicate and organize after natural disasters. Users subscribe to channels to talk to each other, sending live audio files that are accessible to anyone listening in on the channel. Gosai, who is also from Durban, was among 180,000 people who downloaded Zello in the wake of Zuma’s arrest. “This helped us tremendously to create awareness around the community as well as to quell fears,” Gosai told me via Twitter DM. Then he saw a note on his community WhatsApp group urging neighbors to join a sort of neighborhood watch channel on Zello, a “walkie-talkie” app that is fast becoming a tool for protest communication. His WhatsApp chats were flooded and confusing. That violence has led to at least 215 deaths and more than 2,500 arrests.įor South Africans like Amith Gosai, keeping track of what was happening on the ground was hard. Within hours, protests and widespread looting, particularly in his home city of Durban, were reported as supporters stationed themselves around his compound and challenged police. Zuma didn’t turn himself in until July 7, saying he was innocent and that jail could kill him at 79 years old. He also has many detractors, who blame his administration’s corruption for a stagnant economy and weakened democracy. Zuma-the first ethnic Zulu to hold the country’s highest office-has a loyal following.
On June 29, former South African president Jacob Zuma was sentenced to 15 months in prison for corruption during his presidency.