The Communications Ministry is certain to clash with operators of Free-To-Air (FTA) television service in the country, following a policy that seeks to charge viewers of their channels.
Executive Council Member of the Ghana Independent Broadcasters Association (GIBA), Prince Harri Crystal, says the Ministry and its regulating agency, the National Communications Authority (NCA) have no mandate in controlling television service providers operating free-to-air television networks.
“GIBA is strongly opposed to the proposal to implement a conditional access system on the digital terrestrial television platform which has been set up primarily to deliver free-to-air- television services to the populace,” Mr. Crystal stated Thursday, June 6, 2019, at a forum in Accra. The forum was on the theme: “Digital migration and the future of free-to-air television migration in Ghana.”
Mr. Crystal who is also the Member of the National Media Commission (NMC), was speaking at the forum organised by GIBA to discuss the draft policy which the Ministry seeks to adopt, to regulate broadcasters when the country fully migrates from analogue television broadcasting to digital terrestrial television (DTT) transmission platform.
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