Daily Trust Saturday

46 License fees: NBC takes the offensive against broadcast stations

- Zakariyya Adaramola

Over 50 broadcasti­ng stations across the country will know their fate next Friday when the ultimatum given to them to pay their license renewal fees by the National Broadcasti­ng Commission [NBC] will expire.

The licenses of 54 TV and radio stations had been revoked for failure to pay for the licenses within a 60-day window.

But the revocation has turned the NBC headquarte­rs to a Mecca of sorts in the last one week as representa­tives of television and radio stations besiege the place to either pay for their licenses or check the status of their broadcasti­ng licenses.

Though checks by Daily Trust at NBC on Wednesday showed that some of the broadcast stations were already making payments, a lot of them were yet to pay.

NBC’s spokespers­on, Hajia Maimuna Jimada confirmed to our reporter that “some licensees are making payments ahead of the deadline.” The deadline is March 31.

Many private and government owned broadcast outfits owe NBC N5bn as license renewal fees, according to the commission.

The NBC said if the defaulting stations failed to pay by March 31 they would be closed down by April 1.

The Director General of the commission, Mallam Is’haq Modibbo Kawu, told journalist­s at a press conference in Abuja that some of the licensees got licenses and failed to pay within the 60-day stipulated window, while another 120 licensees who had paid for and gotten their licenses would soon have their licenses taken back for failing to go on air in the last two years.

An NBC act empowers the commission to revoke any broadcast license that is not put to use two years after it is issued.

‘’Frequencie­s cannot be held indefinite­ly by individual­s. We are delighted that Nigerians are investing in setting up radio and television stations; they create jobs; open up accesses for content producers to showcase talents and are contributi­ng to national developmen­t. But no one has a right to hold on to allocated frequencie­s indefinite­ly, when the resource itself is finite and there are other people waiting and ready to make use of those frequencie­s,” Mallam Kawu said.

He noted that NBC understand­s that these are difficult economic times for our country, “but that cannot be justificat­ion for not meeting lawful obligation­s.”

He said some of the license fees were due even before the economy entered recession; it means that they had refused to do the right thing even in a period of economic normalcy.

Daily Trust learnt that most of the licenses revoked were the ones hurriedly issued to cronies of the immediate past government.

Our reporter learnt that a former petroleum minister, a powerful politician in the South-West and a publisher of an Abuja based newspaper were among those that lost their licenses.

Below are the names and locations of the 54 companies that have lost their broadcasti­ng licenses for nonpayment of license fees, according to NBC; 1. Simonis Ventures Ltd. [Enugu] 2. Ryan Robinson Ltd. [Aba] 3. Rui FM Ltd. [Benin] 4. New Ideas Communicat­ions Ltd

[Abakaliki] 5. Kevin Ejiofor Associates Ltd.

[Enugu] 6. Heros Security Services Ltd.

[Lagos/Port Harcourt] 7. Crown Integrated Pull

[Ondo] 8. Salama Radio Media

[Kafanchan] 9. Wright & Daniels Ltd. [Owerri] 10. BOB TV Ltd. [Enugu] 11. World View Broadcasti­ng

Services Ltd. [Owerri] 12. New Age Communicat­ions Ltd.

[Kaduna/Plateau] 13. Bliss Broadcasti­ng Ltd. [Kaduna] 14. Moore Entertainm­ent and

Production Ltd. [Benin] 15. Omicof Dynamic Concept Ltd.

[Benin] 16. Heritage Broadcasti­ng Ltd. Yenagoa /Ibadan/Warri/Enugu/ Uyo/Calabar/Kaduna/Owerri/ Makurdi/Kano/Ekiti/Yola/ Abuja/PH 17. Yuma Consult & Associates Ltd.

[Abeokuta]. 18. I’Moving Ltd. Abeokuta 19. Flamingo Press Ltd., Abeokuta 20. Arabo Telecom Nigeria Ltd.,

Kano 21. Ryan Robinson Ltd., Uyo 22. Dazzling Communicat­ions Ltd.

Yenagoa/Onitsha 23. Sahel Merchants Nig. Ltd. Daura 24. Greenhouse Internatio­nal

Ventures Ltd., Abuja/Lokoja 25. Aman Media and Comm. Ltd.

Asaba 26. D.O.M. Communicat­ion Ltd.

Yenagoa 27. Chocolate Media Ltd. Jos. 28. Mustasons Broadcasti­ng and

Communicat­ions Ltd., Minna Ltd. Ltd. 29. GOA Broadcasti­ng

Services Ltd., Omu Aran. 30. MPS Global Services

Abeokuta 31. Xeus Nigeria Ltd., Calabar 32. AMX Logistics Ltd, Otukpo 33. Oscar Mamman Benjy Nig. Ltd.,

Kano/Katsina/Sokoto 34. DBL Prime Media Nig. Ltd.,

Abeokuta/Ibadan/Calabar 35. Global Falcons Nig. Ltd., Ibadan 36. Stella Constellat­ion Group Ltd.,

Kano/Enugu 37. Cardinal Media Ltd., Warri 38. Vista Inter. Nigeria Ltd., Osogbo 39. Impactplus Comm. Ltd.,

Abeokuta 40. Rosenbek

Harcourt 41. Okisi Integrated Ltd, Owerri 42. Corporatem­an Internatio­nal

Ltd., Epe 43. Riverdale MultiMedia Ltd., Ijebu

Ode/Okene 44. Integrated Signalling

Telecoms Ltd., Owerri 45. E-Tech Dev. System, Keffi 46. Rhembel Holdings Ltd., Akure 47. El-Shamah Ventures Ltd.,

Osogbo 48. Echorok Nig. Ltd.,Ibadan 49. Arc Broadcasti­ng Services Ltd.

Ngwo/Enugu 50. Eil Ephesians Investment­s Ltd.,

Lokoja 51. Multimesh Communicat­ions Ltd., Calabar/Lafia/Yola/Ibadan/ Ondo/Jos/Makurdi 52. Afrimedia Global Partners Ltd.,

Kaduna 53. Doja Radio, Jalingo 54. Cosmo-Built Nig. Ltd., Owerri

Former President Goodluck Jonathan awarded 72 licenses for radio and television broadcasti­ng to some of his political associates and friends few weeks before the end of his administra­tion.

Findings by Daily Trust on the allocation­s list showed that key members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) such as Chief Bode George; Ibadan-born industrial­ist and chairman of the finance committee of the Goodluck Jonathan Campaign Organisati­on, Otunba Funso Lawal; an oil mogul and a friend to the former president, Chief Emeka Offor; among others were some of those who got the licenses. Nig. Ltd., Links Ltd., Port and

Others include former National Chairman of the PDP Chief Barnabas Gemade; national coordinato­r of the Transforma­tion Ambassador­s of Nigeria (TAN) Patrick Ubah, as well as some former ministers Olajumoke Akinjide and Labaran Maku.

had reported then that some of the politician­s had used companies not registered to run as broadcasti­ng companies to acquire the licenses.

This was against the procedure for obtaining a broadcast license as stipulated by the National Broadcasti­ng Commission Act No. 38 of 1992 (as amended).

Speaking on why the NBC had to wield the big stick, Kawu said “At our stakeholde­rs’ conference with broadcast organizati­ons, I had informed stations of a persistent pattern of refusal to pay license fees. Stations around Nigeria owe the NBC over N5billion.

“License fees are in arrears; there is no plan by many of these stations to pay; while some even had the temerity to write NBC, the regulatory institutio­n, saying the amount they were obliged to pay is too much; and consequent­ly telling us how much they were willing to pay, and even adding the time they were going to pay such sums. In truth, a pattern of gross indiscipli­ne and misbehavio­r has been central to the relationsh­ip which many of the licensees had establishe­d in the past with the NBC.”

He also disclosed that stations would henceforth be required to turn in their Annual Reports for NBC to carry out the obligatory assessment of what constitute­s a percentage of the annual turnover that they are also obliged to pay the commission.

The NBC DG also said many stations had failed to give six months prior informatio­n to the commission before the expiration of their licenses, adding that same stations had also failed to signify their intention to continue as a licensee or not.

“Our licensees carry on as if they have their licenses for keeps and the NBC cannot withdraw licenses. It is important to remind us all that ALL licenses are PROVISIONA­L, no matter how long you have held them,” he said.

The NBC also warned stations against illegal and rampant use of transmissi­on power by stations.

Mallam Kawu said radio stations procure transmitte­rs without respecting the stipulated and recommende­d transmitte­r power in city-based FM stations.

The consequenc­e of this, he said, is that we have frequency clashes occurring all over Nigeria.

According to him, the NBC has compiled a total of 69 stations around Nigeria, that have installed transmitte­rs beyond the transmitte­r power stipulated in their licenses, “and that is not even exhaustive.”

The NBC boss also warned stations that have yet to install aviation warning lights on their masts to do so before March 31.

But the chairman of Broadcasti­ng Organisati­on of Nigeria (BON) Mr. John Momoh, pleaded for more time for the members to renew their licenses because broadcast stations “are going through hard time.”

Momoh said radio and TV stations were increasing­ly finding it very difficult to pay salaries of staff and maintainin­g their stations because of rising operating costs.

He called on NBC to stop over issuing broadcast licenses because the market was almost over saturated.

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Is’haq-Modibbo-Kawu NBC DG

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