The Citizen (KZN)

FOREIGN BODY

-

Deputy Communicat­ions Minister Pinky Kekana urged South Africans to pay their TV licences, after a meeting with parliament’s portfolio committee on communicat­ion on plans to save the SABC.

“The main revenue stream around the SABC has been the paying of TV licences. And that has not been happening for quite some time. Whatever movie or soapie you see, it means viewers must pay 76c a day – and that has not been happening.”

But South Africans have taken to social media to voice their disapprova­l at calls for them to cough up.

Political and media consultant Makhosini Nkosi said the SABC should be “cash-flush” due to owning “big properties”, including SABC1, Metro FM, 5FM and Ukhozi FM and shouldn’t “complain” about unpaid TV licences.

Several users said to pay for a licence on top of a DStv subscripti­on is excessive, with some suggesting the SABC let MultiChoic­e pay rather than individual­s.

Dirk de Vos, who operates a corporate finance consultanc­y in Cape Town, says “a culture of non-payment has become entrenched” but it’s “not surprising considerin­g what has happened at the SABC”.

The cash-strapped public broadcaste­r has become notorious for its inability to pay content producers for its channels.

Last month, the SABC in a letter to service providers and producers informed them they would

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? A beluga whale swims in the River Thames near Gravesend, east of London, Britain, yesterday.
Picture: Reuters A beluga whale swims in the River Thames near Gravesend, east of London, Britain, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa