Unionised staff of the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC), the state broadcaster, are asking the Government to rescind its planned closure of three of its six channels.
“What the GBC needs is for the government to inject the necessary resources into the state broadcaster, and retool it, rather than asking Management to reduce the channels by half, with some few months ahead of general elections,” Mr Sam Nat-Kevor, the Divisional and Local Union Chairman for GBC, said in Accra.
Addressing workers, who staged a mini-protest after an emergency meeting, Mr Nat-Kevor, Mr Nutor Bibini Nutor, the Secretary to the Union and Mr Mark Agodoa, the Vice Chairman of the Union, urged the workers to remain calm, as management dialogued with the Minister to halt the intended closure.
A directive from the Communications Minister, Ursula Owusu-Ekuful, in a letter dated June 29, 2020, to the Director-General to have three of the six channels of the GBC closed within 60 days, attributing the reason to congestion of Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT).
The directive has been met with resistance among some media houses.
Digital terrestrial television DTTV or DTT, is a technology for terrestrial television in which land-based (terrestrial) television stations broadcast television content by radio waves to televisions in consumers' residences in a digital format.
Parliament’s Minority Spokesperson on Communications, Mr Sam Nartey George, is querying what the intended consolidation of the channels meant on the grounds of creating more space; and some workers are speculating that the ceded channels would be allocated to private entities.
Following the directive, the GBC management is seeking the intervention of the National Media Commission (NMC) for a reversal of the intended closure of the channels, a move the Communications Minister is reported to have said would not work.
At the meeting, the placard holding angry workers wearing red bands on their arms and head, chanted war songs in protest of the intended closure.
Some of the placards read “Government Retool the State Broadcaster to Deliver,” “GBC Has Men and Women to Operate and Maintain DTT”, “GBC is Fully Funded by the State and Should Be Operated by the GBC for the State”.
Mr Nat-Kevor appealed to the NMC to protect the interests of Ghanaians and exercise its constitutional mandate and save the GBC, which he described as the soul of the state.
He appealed to the workers to remain calm and go about their duties while consultations were carried on with the NMC to reverse the decision.
He said “We believe that these moves are subtle moves to privatize the Ghana Broadcasting cooperation, after several attempts over the years,” and added: “if you claim that the DTT platform is full, and you want to create a redundancy, what do you do, infrastructure can be expanded to have more spectrum to occupy.”
Mr Nutor on his part said the workers would continue with the protests until the Minister of Communication rescinds the decision.
He said: “We are saying no. It will not work and we shall challenge this decision at the peril of our lives”.
Meanwhile, Prof Amin Alhassan, the Director General, has said all the six channels serve specific purposes, and thus none can be taken off.
In a letter to the NMC, Prof Alhassan explained that all the six channels were dedicated to 24-hours channels, with “specified focus reflecting the mandate of GBC as a State Broadcaster, a Public Service Broadcaster and a Commercial Broadcaster”.
Latest Stories
-
Social media buzzing ahead of Black Sherif’s ‘Zaama Disco’ on December 21
6 minutes -
Afenyo-Markin still suffering from the massive defeat – Fifi Kwetey
14 minutes -
Retain Afenyo-Markin as NPP leader, he has experience – Deputy Speaker
25 minutes -
Kufuor didn’t leave behind a strong economy – Fifi Kwetey
29 minutes -
It won’t be business as usual, remain humble – Fifi Kwetey to party members
1 hour -
Ebenezer Ahumah Djietror appointed as new Clerk to Parliament
2 hours -
Actress Benyiwaa of ‘Efiewura’ TV series dead
3 hours -
Ashanti Regional Chief Imam dies at age 74
3 hours -
Africa Arts Network calls for tax reform to save Ghana’s theatre industry
3 hours -
SSTN Ghana Chapter reaffirms commitment to economic growth under new leadership
3 hours -
Inlaks strengthens leadership team with key appointments to drive growth across sub-Saharan Africa
4 hours -
Green Financing: What Ghana’s Eco-startups need to know
4 hours -
CHAN Qualifiers: Amoah confident of beating Nigeria
4 hours -
Governments deprioritising health spending – WHO
5 hours -
Lordina Foundation brings Christmas joy to orphans
5 hours