The Citizen (Gauteng)

State is blind on SA’s plight

- Amanda Watson

The move from an analogue TV signal was supposed to have been done by 2011, and it seems the legal actions against the government may not be over yet. The Broadcasti­ng Digital Migration Policy for South Africa was gazetted on 8 September, 2008.

At the time, then communicat­ions minister Dr Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri noted the “looming switch-on date on 1 November, 2008 requires us to work at a lighting speed concomitan­t with our business unusual strategy”.

Nearly 14 years of court cases and fumbling later, despite what incumbent Communicat­ions Minister Khumbudzo Ntshavheni wants, the system is plainly far from ready.

When the country’s national broadcaste­r says it isn’t ready for the analogue switch-off, it’s time for government to take notice.

The SABC board noted on Friday the four provinces designated for switch-off this coming Thursday comprise 68% of South Africa’s poor.

“As at February 2022 only 165 000 [set top boxes] out of the 2.9 million indigent households (5.7%) had been installed in the four outstandin­g provinces,” the SABC board noted.

Not a problem, Ntshavheni’s department stated yesterday.

It has 1.4 million indigent applicatio­ns for government’s free decoder and installati­on and it is going to install 1.2 million decoders in three days. Right.

If you believe this is possible, you’re probably still afraid of the 5G apparently contained in the various Covid vaccinatio­ns.

Bizarrely, a TV licence is not mandatory requiremen­t when applying for a set-top box assistance.

Unfortunat­ely, nor will you become a walking, talking, cellphone tower equipped with technology this country has yet to be equipped for should you be vaccinated.

The issue of set top boxes – meant to facilitate an admittedly good idea of better clarity, stronger signals and more channels – is also fraught with problems, and with Sentech being given the tender at the 11th hour is raising a lot more than eyebrows.

Our appointed – not elected – ministers simply do not learn.

There’s the R50 million donation to Cuba the department of internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n recently gleefully announced to assist that country with its hungry showed just how blind government is to South Africa’s people who struggle to eat on a daily basis. In 2021, SA taxpayers “loaned” Cuba R84.6 million.

Then there were the Cuban doctors deployed in SA to help with Covid we paid R429 million for, the army mechanics who came here to teach our guys how to fix our rickety vehicles at an alleged estimated cost of around R1 billion.

Exactly where all this money has gone once it landed in Cuba, is anyone’s guess.

And while all this money is flowing out of SA, our children are dying from hunger.

While apartheid and colonisati­on have their own horror story to tell, the ANC government has been making up for lost time.

Simply take a look at the auditor-general’s reports, or the numbers coming out of the Zondo state capture reports, or the Special Investigat­ing Unit which is making headway in recovering money stolen from the state.

The TV signal migration from analogue to digital is just another example of how well our current leaders have learned to ignore what people are saying.

When the country’s national broadcaste­r says it isn’t ready for the analogue switch-off, it’s time for government to take notice.

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