Sowetan

‘MultiChoic­e part of state capture’

Ex-minister against deal made with SABC

- By Kgothatso Madisa

Former communicat­ions minister Yunus Carrim says he believes the deal entered into between MultiChoic­e and the SABC for the broadcast of the 24-hour news channel on the DStv platform was a “policy capture” of the public broadcaste­r.

Testifying before the commission of inquiry into state capture yesterday, Carrim said he believes that MultiChoic­e, through its owner Koos Bekker, had used the negotiatio­ns to capture the SABC.

When the SABC was launching its 24hour news channel in 2013, which was to be hosted on MultiChoic­e’s DStv platform, the company agreed to pay R553m over five years for the news channel but requested exclusive access to its archived material in return.

According to Carrim, MultiChoic­e also used these negotiatio­ns to influence government policy on the migration from analogue to digital television through settop boxes which it was opposed to. To date the migration has not taken place. Carrim said MultiChoic­e put a clause in their agreement that the public broadcaste­r would not encrypt its set-top boxes.

“This for me is a very clear example of regulatory or policy capture where by irregular means you shape a government policy.

There is absolutely no reason to include, in a commercial transactio­n between the SABC and DStv, a clause that deals with government policy.”

Carrim, who was opposed to the agreement, was not reappointe­d into cabinet following the 2014 national general elections. He told the commission he did not voluntaril­y come before it as it would have been perceived as him still having issues with the decision to not reappoint him.

He said they initially did not have a problem with the agreement but later realised that MultiChoic­e had a lot of power over the public broadcaste­r.

He said the archives were said to be worth at least R1bn but were given to MultiChoic­e for free. The archive material is currently aired on DStv Encore channel.

The agreement was signed by former SABC chief operations officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng allegedly without the board’s approval.

“When I wrote to Mr Vincent Smith, who was chairperso­n of the ad-hoc parliament­ary committee looking into the SABC, I set out that our problem with the MultiChoic­e agreement… was that a big multi-internatio­nal is … forcing the SABC to change its policy and try to influence us as the government.”

Ahead of Carrim’s testimony, CEO Calvo Mawela sent MultiChoic­e staff an internal e-mail telling them the company always conducted its business on ethics and they should not worry about the revelation­s.

 ?? /TREVOR SAMSON ?? Yunus Carrim appeared before the commission of inquiry into state capture.
/TREVOR SAMSON Yunus Carrim appeared before the commission of inquiry into state capture.

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