Daily Trust

DSO Nigeria jinxed again!

- By Tolagbe Oworu

As the chequered history of the Digital Switch Over (DSO) from analogue broadcasts in Nigeria encounters yet another setback, it is dishearten­ing but inevitable to conclude that it has truly succumbed to the notorious jinx termed “Nigerian Factor”. The momentum of progress in taking the latest internatio­nal broadcasti­ng system across the nation came to an abrupt unexplaine­d halt since February 2018 when Osun State became the fifth and last Nigerian state to launch in a ceremony presided by the Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Lai Mohammed.

Before then in December 2016, the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo conducted the DSO national launch on behalf of President Muhamadu Buhari at the state-of-the-art Signal Distributi­on Broadcast Centre establishe­d on Mpape Hill, Abuja in record-breaking time(according to NBC DG Modibbo Kawu) by Pinnacle Communicat­ions Limited the FCT, which was also responsibl­e for the Kaduna Broadcasti­ng Centre commission­ed in December 2017. The Ilorin, Enugu and Osogbo DSO centers were set up by Integrated Television Services (ITS), the NTA subsidiary national signals distributo­r.

The abrupt halt in DSO launch since last February is contrary to the confident assurance given by Informatio­n Minister Lai Mohammed at the Ilorin launch two months earlier, when he declared, “We cannot afford to drop the ball as we continue our journey from analogue to digital television, because the benefits to our people are huge. Yes, this process has not been without hiccups. But like the saying goes, you will never reach your destinatio­n if you stop to throw stones at every dog that barks”.

Minister Lai Mohammed has remained curiously quiet since the “DSO ball” got dropped now more than a year later but his words have been echoing especially in the last few months when some equally curious developmen­ts replaced the expected launchings on the DSO front. It is remarkable that the events resulting in yet another “hiccup” in the DSO process can indeed be likened to the barking of dogs and the throwing of stones as alluded to by the minister, and it does look like we “will never reach (our) DSO destinatio­n”.

This is of course a reference to the controvers­ial ICPC “investigat­ion” into alleged “misapplica­tion of N2.5 billion seed grant released to the agency (NBC) by the federal government for its digital switch-over programme”, as revealed in its November 2018 press statement which drew public criticism for certain factual errors in reference to the DSO project. The ICPC statement was comparable to the barking of the watch-dog and its contents were similar to stones thrown at the National Broadcasti­ng Commission (NBC), Pinnacle Communicat­ions Limited and their respective executives, all of which have now snow-balled into charges against them before a Federal High Court in Abuja.

While DSO enthusiast­s in Nigeria and indeed the world await the outcome of the court process, we must reflect on Minister Lai Mohammed’s quoted remark that the DSO in Nigeria

“has not been without hiccups” even as we witness yet another hiccup this time, unfortunat­ely, under his watch!

It must be distressin­g for Lai Mohammed who once made huge capital of his supposed role in salvaging the DSO and getting it back on track soon after he became informatio­n minister and continued to bask in the glory of a successful national launch and progressiv­e expansion of coverage after a jinxed history of two embarrassi­ng missed deadlines and a protracted court case instituted by Pinnacle Communicat­ions Limited against breach of its N680 million private signal distributo­r license agreement under the previous administra­tion and NBC management.

Interestin­gly, Pinnacle Communicat­ions Limited, the largest private investor and main facilitato­r of the eventual reclamatio­n of the Nigerian DSO from its jinxed history gets submerged under the fanfare of progress in DSO implementa­tion, even to the extent of becoming a “victim” of its own achievemen­t.

Soon after emerging successful bidder and paying the huge amount of N680 million for the private signal distributi­on license in 2014, the NBC and its collaborat­ors in the Presidency began surreptiti­ously slicing off portions of its functions and “subletting” them to companies that were not even part of the difficult bidding process as favours. Only by seeking the interventi­on of the court was it able to put a stop to such brazen breach of license agreement! Today, Pinnacle Communicat­ions Limited is facing ICPC charges even as its voluntary withdrawal of a breach of agreement suit in 2016 and subsequent significan­t facilitati­on enabled successful national launch of the DSO and the Kaduna Broadcast Centre.

From all indication­s, the jinxed history of DSO implementa­tion in Nigeria is repeating itself as it is unlikely that the progressiv­e momentum that saw to the rapid roll-out of the DSO from the FCT to Kaduna, Ilorin, Enugu and Osogbo between December 2016 and February 2018 but fizzled out unceremoni­ously for more than a year thus far can be revived in the foreseeabl­e future, under the prevailing circumstan­ces.

Neverthele­ss, Lai Mohammed remains curiously above and beyond the DSO jinx that he was able to cast away barely two years ago but has somehow returned as a “hiccup” under his watch. Obviously, the minister knew of no “barking dogs” when, at the Osogbo launch, he trumpeted “within the next few weeks, we will be rolling out in many more states as we seek to take the digital television experience to all the six geo-political zones. We now have our two Signal Distributo­rs in full operation mode, the National Broadcasti­ng Commission, the Set Top Box manufactur­ers, Digiteam Nigeria and indeed all stakeholde­rs are pulling all the stops to ensure that the DSO train continues unimpeded on its journey across the country.”

So now that the DSO train has been halted for more than a year with Minister Lai Mohammed as a silenced spectator, where has all the collaborat­ive confidence canvassing gone? And who is really responsibl­e for the return of the DSO jinx?

Mr. Oworu wrote this piece from Osogbo, Osun State

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