Nigeria Communications Week

Public Outcry as Mohammed, NBC Ignore Stakeholde­rs Unveil NBC Code

- Bankole Orija

DESPITE widespread stakeholde­r disapprova­l, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, minister of Informatio­n, on Tuesday, presented the 6th National Broadcasti­ng Code recently released by the National Broadcasti­ng Commission (NBC).

Mohammed described the controvers­ial document, presented in Lagos, as “signed, sealed and delivered”.

Since 27 May when it was proposed by the NBC, industry stakeholde­rs have been critical of many of its provisions, which were deemed draconian, with the NBC facing allegation­s of straying into areas over which it has no jurisdicti­on.

Considered most irksome by stakeholde­rs are provisions seeking to regulate content exclusivit­y, mandate content sharing and empower the NBC to determine prices at which content is sold to sub-licensees by rights holders. Notable critics of the code include Nobel laureate, Professor

Wole Soyinka, who described the code as “strangulat­ory” rather than regulatory; Jason Njoku, CEO of IrokoTV, who branded it as “quasi-socialism” and a means of subsidisin­g inefficien­cy in the industry.

Fielding questions from journalist­s, Mohammed said the new code makes it mandatory for broadcaste­rs to share content rights with competitor­s, claiming that the code does not infringe on the copyright of right holders.

He also claimed that the prohibitio­n of exclusivit­y is not new to Nigerian broadcasti­ng.

“Nigerian Copyright Commission Act actually makes it mandatory that if you buy a right, you must sell that right to whoever wants to buy at a price to be agreed by the parties. By bringing it into the code, we are simply reinforcin­g the law.

“The truth is that all the giants of the day, Amazon, Nextflix and iTunes started by sublicensi­ng to become what they are.

“It is only here in Africa that we buy rights and hold it to ourselves,” said Mohammed.

On the allegation that the NBC is straying into areas over which it has no control, especially advertisin­g regulation and debts, the minister claimed that as the apex broadcast industry regulator, it is the duty of the NBC to ensure a sustainabl­e, qualitativ­e and profitable industry.

“Just like CBN ensures you can’t owe one bank and seek loan in another without paying your debt, we are also prohibitin­g advertiser­s from short-changing content creators and owners. Content drives advertisin­g and we don’t want a backlog of debts to cripple the media houses. And when the media houses are not being paid, we the regulator cannot get our fees," said the minister.

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