The Ghana Independent Broadcasters Association (GIBA) has sued the Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation (MoCD) and
KNet Ghana Limited for unilaterally charging “contribution links fees” without any legal basis or parliamentary approval.
According to GIBA, the two entities also disconnected broadcasters from the National Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT) Transmissions platform on account of non-payment of the fee charged for contribution link services.
This is in statement signed by the president of GIBA, Cecil Sunkwa-Mills, copied to the Ghanaian Times, in Accra yesterday.
It said that the association sued MoCD and KNET Ghana Limited for establishing and charging arbitrary fees to be paid into a Central Digital Transmission Company Limited as DTT channel hosting fees by broadcasters, without the approval of the fees from parliament.
GIBA recalled that, in 2005, the NCA set up a taskforce of which GIBA was a member, to consider Ghana’s position and the signing of the Geneva 2006 (GE06) Agreement establishing the Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT) broadcasting plan in the bands 174 – 230MHz and 470 – 862MHz.
In January 2010, according to the statement, the Minister of Communications inaugurated a National Digital Broadcasting Migration Technical Committee (NDBMTC) of which GIBA was also a member, to develop a roadmap document and among other objectives make policy recommendations to the government to enable Ghana achieve a cost effective and timely migration from analogue to digital broadcasting.
In August 2010, the report on the migration from analogue to digital broadcasting in Ghana was approved by the Cabinet as the Digital Migration Roadmap document was approved by government.
The statement said in order to protect the public interest, achieve universal access and to prevent marginalisation resulting from the analogue to digital broadcasting migration programme, the decision was made for a unified transmissions network, serving as a single national DTT platform for the broadcast of all authorised Freeto-Air TV stations, in accordance with the roadmap, which served as a guiding framework for the migration programme in the country.
A number of GIBA TV stations were asked to make payment to KNet Ghana Limited for Contribution Link Services that it purports to have been providing to the broadcasters in contributing their programme signals from their studio facilities to the National DTT Headend at Kanda in Accra, GIBA explained.
KNet claimed that the Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation (MoCD) approved of them to be the links service provider and granted them the mandate to demand payment of such services from broadcasters on the national DTT platform.
Beyond the issuance of the Payment Notice, KNet has decided to disconnect the TV service of some members of GIBA from being accessed by the general viewing public, and continues to pressurise other broadcasters who refused to patronise their link services, with threats of disconnection from the pg. 2 National DTT platform.
BY TIMES REPORTER