Three
popular Kenyan TV stations are due to return to air, ending a three- week
protest in which they turned off their digital signals. KTN, Citizen and NTV-
including its subsidiary, QTV – switched off their signals in a dispute over
the move from analogue to digital transmission.
The
three private stations had wanted more time for the move, scheduled for
February, but the government refused. Television is the main source in urban
parts of Kenya. About the third of the country’s households own a TV set.
The
BBC’s Ferdinand Omondi in Nairobi says KTN, Citizen and NTV were the country’s
most watched networks until their protest blackout. There are due to turn on
their digital signals at 1850 East Africa time (1550 GMT), initially
broadcasting in Nairobi and surrounding areas. Citizen TV’s website says its
viewers will require universal set top boxes which receive free-to-air signals.
The TV stations had wanted the government to postpone the date for the digital
migration to give them more time to import set-top boxes for the distribution
of their content.
The
government rejected the request for a delayed migration, and ordered the
stations to move to digital on 13 February as planned. The analogue signals for
the three networks were then turned off on the orders of the government. In
protest, the stations switched off their digital broadcasts, claiming that the
government move discriminated against them. After the stations went off air,
K24, a private channel owned by President Uhuru Kenyatta’s family saw its audience
figures grow by 173%.
Neighboring
Tanzania went ahead with its digital migration on 31 December 2013, the first
country to do so of the five members of the East African Community. The group
had signed to an early switchover to fix any glitches ahead of the June 2015
global deadline to end analogue transmissions.
Posted by Kapolesya Doreen
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