Hopes of Ghana Independent Broadcasters
Association to have their concerns regarding the Government’s deal with Chinese
owned StarTimes has been dashed after sector Minister, Ursula Owusu-Ekuful
downplayed their inputs saying GIBA has no right to dictate to the government
what to do.
Describing their concerns as alarmist, Ursula
Owusu-Ekuful emphasised her unwillingness to engage GIBA articulating that the
government was elected with a mandate and that doesn’t include kowtowing to the
demands of GIBA.
In her response to submissions from a rep of GIBA
and Sam George, NDC MP for Ningo-Prampram and member of Parliament’s
Communications Committee the Communications Minister suggested she was confused
about the position espoused by them.
She noted that GIBA and other stakeholders who
have raised issues with the deal have failed to clearly point out what their
real concerns are, leaving her with doubts as to what really the issues are.
She stressed that GIBA, irrespective of whatever
their position on the matter is, cannot compel government to take certain
actions simply because they(GIBA) have said so.
She asserted that since the government is
financing the project and not GIBA, they have no right whatsoever to dictate to
government what it should do or what processes to follow in engaging Chinese
company StarTimes.
Government through the Communications Ministry
engaged Chinese company StarTimes to expand infrastructure for digital
terrestrial television.
This is the second time StarTimes is doing
business with the Government of Ghana on the same project after the initial
contract signed in 2012 worth $95m was cancelled in 2015 and given to Ghanaian
owned K-Net who successfully executed the project for about $13 million less
the StarTimes amount at $82 million.
GIBA accused government of ceding the country’s
DTT platform to StarTimes through the Ministry of Communications as contained
in a press release stating “If StarTimes is allowed to control both Ghana’s
only digital television infrastructure and the satellite space in the name of
digital migration, Ghana would have virtually submitted its broadcast space to
Chinese control and content.”
Speaking on JoyNews’ flagship Saturday morning
news analysis show Newsfile, the Communications Minister remarked, “Is the
independent Broadcasters Association telling us that they should dictate the
pace, content of the DTT migration project? I don’t think so and I think that
they also see themselves as key stakeholders of the project but not as
dictators of the entire project because they are not financing the project and
they can’t sit there and dictate what government does in this process. And I
will be a little hesitant to think that that is the stance they have taken that
because they have said ‘A’, it should be ‘A’ and it shouldn’t be any other
process.”
“I have sat here and listened to these two
gentlemen and I am still at a loss what their issues are. Is it a question of
not getting timely response to the correspondence that has been sent to the
Ministry? or is it as has been put out there in that alarmist publication by
GIBA that the Ministry of Communications is handing over the DTT infrastructure
to a Chinese company StarTimes to manage? What is the issue? When you put it to
GIBA they were unable to allege that what they put out there in their press
statement is what is the issue. Now it is lack of timely response in questions
sent to the Ministry so I am still trying to find out exactly what GIBA’s
concerns are so that we can address them” the sector Minister observed.Wading
into the debate, Ningo Prampram MP Sam George hinted that Ghana is at risk of
flooding its media landscape with a lot of Chinese content and production as
has been the case in several African countries recently.
He expressed doubts over some clauses in the
contract insisting the deal is not in the best interest of the country and has
the potential to kick out of business, private Ghanaian-owned media
establishments.
Sam George expressed his disappointment in
government’s decision to ditch a local firm that built the infrastructure
without providing any substantial basis for their actions asserting that the
tax waivers granted the Chinese company could have been extended to some local
firms to help them flourish.
The member of the Communications Committee of
parliament argued, “In Burundi post-2015, during the launch of one of the
projects Mr Chong Yin Xing, Chief Manager of Burundi branch of StarTimes
remarked that the beneficiaries of the project will watch channels like Kungfu
channel, Samson Kungfu Channel, watch Chinese news, so that they can have a
direct knowledge of China. Samson anybody who have done marketing 1-O-1 will
know that what StarTimes is doing is building market penetration. They are
going into the most deprived areas where they may not have DTT access as we sit
now because we have not rolled out full DTT access but they are trying to
capture that market”“Now our government is financing a Chinese enterprise’s
business market penetration when Samson Multimedia and all the work Kwesi Twum
has done in our media landscape they have not enjoyed GHC1 in waivers. K-NET
has built one of the biggest platforms, the DTH platform, they have not enjoyed
anything, Dr Paa Kwesi Nduom has built First Digital he has not enjoyed
anything, Chief Crystal Dzirakor of Crystal TV has not enjoyed anything. These
are indigenous Ghanaian business that has not enjoyed GHC1” he submitted.
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