Terror attacks boosting Somali TV sales
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Inside the small office, the line of sweating clients waiting to renew their satellite TV subscriptions keeps growing. Technicians crimp wires and test signal strength of boxes while others go to homes across the Somali capital to install new systems or fix faulty ones.
The TV business is booming in Somalia, in part because of fears by people of gathering in public places like restaurants that are targeted for deadly attacks by the militant group al-Shabab.
Movie theaters, long a source of entertainment for Mogadishu residents, have been shuttered after a wave of terrorist attacks. Many Somalis consider restaurants and hotels too dangerous to visit.
The Somali National Theater, which had started to pick up a large following after al-Shabab was ousted from Mogadishu in 2011 by African Union military forces, suffered a major blow after it was bombed in 2012 in an attack that killed dozens of people.
With the al-Qaidalinked militants using violence to impose bans on modern cultural events, TV sales are going up, in turn fuelling demand for satellite TV services.
Business flourishing
Access TV, a satellite service, was launched in 2012 and offers world news, local news and sports— a mix that many Somalis like. In the past, three satellite dishes were required to receive all that but now only one is needed, along with the receiver.
“It’s a quick sure-fire venture and demand is exceptionally high,” said Abdirizak Hassan Muse, who manages the Access TV office in Mogadishu.
On a recent day, a technician from Access TV went up onto the white sun-splashed roof of the company’s offices in this seaside capital to adjust the signal received by large satellite dishes. The shell-pocked city stretched out below him.
With more than 5,000 subscribers, Access TV is a flourishing business. Its website says 100 channels are on offer. Five other companies offering similar services have opened in Mogadishu. Sports channels, especially those showing European soccer leagues, are the most popular
In a country that until just a couple of years ago was notorious for piracy — the real kind with the seizing of cargo ships and yachts — and other lawlessness, some wonder about legitimacy of the providers. Ahmed Muhummed, an economist in Mogadishu, said there is “doubt that such operations are wholly legitimate.”
Finding fun at home
The cost is relatively low. In addition to the $60 installation fee for Access TV, each customer pays $8 a month. Muse said business is growing so fast that his company had to train and hire freelance technicians in order to meet the demand.
For Abdulaziz Yasin, a new subscriber to Access TV, the service means he can get entertainment at home without having to venture out to find it.
“Cinemas were better, but with this service we can at least avoid the unsafe public gatherings,” Yasin said. “We hope peace will come, so that we can have fun at any location of our choice.”