The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Government secures $1,8m for digitisati­on

- Walter Nyamukondi­wa Chinhoyi Bureau

GOVERNMENT is set to bring in an initial 100 000 Set Top Boxes (SBTs) after securing the $1,8 million deposit required by the supplier as the digitisati­on project inches closer to bringing digital visual signal into households.

Speaking on the sidelines of Zimbabwe Digitisati­on programme outreach in Chinhoyi yesterday, Informatio­n, Media and Broadcasti­ng Service permanent secretary Mr George Charamba, said the external payment system bottleneck had been cleared.

“We now have the money. It’s as good as the Set Top Boxes are acquired, but it has been the Nostro Account limitation­s, which meant we have been unable to pay external suppliers. The initiative had been frozen as a result,” he said.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe recently injected $70 million into the Nostro Account but the list of things that need to be paid for threaten to overwhelm the commitment.

Mr Charamba said the money would come from the $16 million payment made by the Ministry of Lands and Rural Resettleme­nt to the Informatio­n, Media and Broadcasti­ng Service Ministry last year.

Government is targeting importatio­n of 400 000 STBs from Chinese technology firm Huawei with the initial 100 000 enough for the area covered so far.

“We think with a figure of 100 000, we should be fairly comfortabl­e, but as we grow the area covered in terms of our digital footprint, we bring in more (STBs) in tranches,” he said.

The STBs like our normal decoders convert digital signal so that it can be processed by our television sets, which are analogue based.

He said the constraint in terms of rolling out the digitisati­on programme had never been about money, but a “moribund” Nostro Account, which allows the country to pay external suppliers.

Mr Charamba implored engi- neers working on the project to ringfence content and Set Top Boxes from piracy.

“We need to work on Research and Developmen­t targeting accessorie­s that are relevant to digitisati­on. We should be able to eventually develop our own Set Top Boxes and satellite dishes,” he said.

“We want to build an industry around the digitisati­on project. There is need to create products that are pirate proof. Engineers give me solutions that ensure production­s are not pirated. Let’s explore the technical response and pre-emption strategy,”

In her address on behalf of Informatio­n, Media and Broadcasti­ng Services Minister Dr Christophe­r Mushohwe, Deputy Minister Thokhozile Mathuthu, said that people should be wary of cultural imperialis­m, which led to moral decadence.

Dr Mushohwe said the digitisati­on programme provided a window of opportunit­y to reverse some of the bad traits in society through amplifying the nation’s diverse cultural values.

He called on improved content, which drew viewership, while highlighti­ng some of the nation’s epoch moments like the Chinhoyi Battle.

“I want to read about the Chinhoyi Battle, watch a film depicting what took place, how the gallant fighters related with others. That’s our story,” he said.

Zimbabwe is paying an annual fee of $1,2 million for the satellite space to European Telecom Satellite (Eutelsat), and has already set up an uplink, and towers in some parts of the country are at various stages of constructi­on.

Government is setting up primary infrastruc­ture before inviting people who want to set up television stations following the increase of channels to 12 through the digitisati­on programme.

The event was attended by Mashonalan­d West Minister of State Cde Faber Chidarikir­e, officials from the Broadcasti­ng Authority of Zimbabwe, Transmedia, Film School, ZBC and content producers.

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