The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Namibia to host digitisati­on meeting

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WINDHOEK/LUSAKA. — Namibia will host the 5th Africa and Digitisati­on Conference and the 25th Anniversar­y of the Southern Africa Broadcasti­ng Associatio­n (SABA), later this month, a SABA official said on Tuesday.

The conference, scheduled for September 25-29 in the Namibian capital Windhoek, will bring together over 150 leaders in broadcasti­ng, satellite services, online distributi­on channels, telecom operators, and regulators from Africa and beyond, said SABA Secretary General Ellen Nanuses. The theme of the conference will be “Transforma­tional Leadership During a Time of Digital Transition,” Nanuses said.

Nanuses said the first event will start with a two-day forum aimed at reviewing progress made among member states of the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) in their digital terrestria­l television (DTT) migration, Post-DTT successes and challenges.

During the conference, participan­ts will also discuss the evolution of broadcasti­ng and the next business frontier — going mobile.

SABA was founded in 1993, with members coming from 15 member states of the SADC. Its members include public broadcaste­rs, regulators and service providers in media and content developmen­t.

Meanwhile, the Zambian government said on Tuesday that it was on course to switch to digital television broadcasti­ng as migration was within schedule.

Minister of Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Services Kampamba Mulenga said the country was on course and progress towards digital television migration was on the schedule.

The first phase of migration from analogue to digital television had been completed with the initial switch expected to be implemente­d on October 1 covering major cities, Mulenga said at a Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) Ministers’ Meeting on Communicat­ion and Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technologi­es (ICTs) in Durban, South Africa.

Zambia, she said, is the first country in Africa which successful­ly acquired over 500 000 decoders in readiness for the switch, adding that it shows the country is ready to step into the digital era.

The government has assigned TopStar, a joint venture agreement between state broadcaste­r the Zambia National Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n and Chinese satellite television provider StarTimes, which has cut the prices of its decoders by half to enable people to afford to them. — Xinhua.

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