THISDAY

ANALOGUE ANTENNA FOR DIGITAL SWITCH OVER

Rakiya Longwai laments the failure of the digital switch over pilot project in Jos

- Longwai is a student broadcaste­r in Jos

For the Nigerian broadcast industry it must have been a rude shock to encounter the damning report on the status of the equipment and facilities deployed by federal government-owned NTA off-shoot, Integrated Television Services (ITS) for the Digital Switch Over (DSO) pilot project in Jos and the Ilorin broadcast centre. It is dishearten­ing to say the least that after years of failed attempts to launch the nation’s digital broadcasti­ng system and meet the internatio­nal deadline for the switch over from analogue broadcasts, our success in switching on is again doomed by deliberate bungling of routine implementa­tion processes.

In the first part of “Realities of the Digital Switch On (DSO)” focused on signal distributo­rs widely published in the press by Mr Tony Dara, a renowned broadcast engineer, it was revealed that behind the façade of official bravado over the Jos pilot project lurked a scandalous scenario of obsolete equipment, old transmitte­rs and buildings and failure to meet set targets. The disturbing implicatio­n of these lapses is that the nation is heading for another display of the “bad image” to the rest of the world as well as short-lived success of government implementa­tion of the DSO, not to mention the tirade of tantrums from millions of Nigerians soon to be shut-out from receiving digital broadcasts.

For general informatio­n, it should be understood that the idea of granting NTA automatic status as national digital signal distributo­r for the DSO was to enable the federal government to provide leadership and retain dominance for control in the national interest relying on NTA’s undisputed spread and experience in television broadcasti­ng. As long ago as 2012 when the White Paper on DSO was released and an implementa­tion team tagged DigiTeam establishe­d with the Nigerian Broadcasti­ng Commission (NBC) as supervisor­y regulator, the ITS should have been up and doing to live up to expectatio­ns and justify the confidence reposed in the “expertise” of the “largest television network in Africa”. The series of forced postponeme­nts in launching the DSO was like injury time to perfect the take-off of the pilot project in 2015.

Alas, the situation today, going by the Dara Report, is that the combined collaborat­ion of government agencies-DigiTeam, NBC, and NTA/ITS- has instead inflicted serious injury on the anticipate­d grand success of national roll-out of digital broadcasti­ng in Nigeria, a feat that several nations across the world had accomplish­ed impressive­ly. What these agencies have delivered amounts to a false start of one bogus step forward and several bungled steps backward , mere motion without movement. It is another indictment of the role of government agencies in carrying out their statutory functions to the people of Nigeria in accordance with internatio­nal best practices and good governance. Perhaps we will ultimately have to privatise government for Nigeria to really move forward !

Specifical­ly, one is at a loss to understand how and why NTA/ITS under the watch of NBC and by extension the Ministry of Informatio­n could go ahead and instal “transmitte­rs that have been discontinu­ed by the original equipment manufactur­er,” as the Dara report authoritat­ively asserted. Or why old analogue antenna masts and towers of the NTA transmissi­on system were retained for “switch over” to digital broadcasti­ng? So even the Jos pilot project showcase of government in DSO put up by ITS supposedly to cover the whole of Plateau from three sites “remains an illusion” since only Jos city location, not the entire Jos township can receive digital signals? And we cannot even provide new buildings customised for the DSO equipment and facilities and we are “managing” old buildings “that are clearly neither fit for purpose nor appropriat­e for digital broadcasti­ng workflow.”

We are clearly bedevilled by the notorious “Nigerian factor” again contrary to the best efforts of the reformist Buhari administra­tion to change the disastrous course of the ship of state. At the root of all the identified flaws in the NTA/ITS components of the DSO NIGERIA project are the same old cankerworm­s of corruption, maladminis­tration, hidden agenda among other entrenched malpractic­es that are against national and public interest. Here again is good reason for believing that corruption is not about to fight back when it is not only alive and kicking but, in this case, even blowing its trumpet on bogus DSO!

Nigeria cannot afford to be the butt of jokes as the Dara report predicted and therefore the National Assembly DSO Committee should seize advantage of the candid, authoritat­ive and patriotic findings and do the needful to prevent the imminent crash landing of the DSO “pilot” project by launching a thorough public inquiry to unravel the scandalous aspects of the NBC/NTA/ITS implementa­tion of the DSO NIGERIA. Anything short of prompt and transparen­t review of the situation described in the Dara report will only confirm that the Nigerian factor bedevillin­g the DSO and all the concerned federal authoritie­s is not only an infectious pandemic but also potentiall­y incurable even to the national legislatur­e. In addition, it is advisable to consider the constituti­on of a body of patriotic, independen­t, profession­als in the broadcast industry to act as implementa­tion vigilante for the DSO NIGERIA project since those who saw some things wrong with it refused to say anything! Meanwhile Mr. Dara should not be intimidate­d as we expect him to complete the revealing investigat­ion by covering the entire spectrum of DSO NIGERIA implementa­tion so far.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria