South Africa: ICASA faces legal threat, amid risking mobile TV promise to FIFA


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South Africa: ICASA faces legal threat, amid risking mobile TV promise to FIFA

The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) could face legal action if it did not reconsider its decision to give companies just three weeks to apply for the new digital mobile television service licence.

According to a local media report by BusinessDay on 26 April 2010, black-owned Mobile TV Consortium sent a lawyer’s letter last week to ICASA chairman Paris Mashile, objecting to the 7 May 2010 deadline. The letter said it was not reasonable to expect companies to meet the requirements of the mobile television regulations in the time given, and that the deadline was not only anticompetitive but unconstitutional as it was biased towards existing operators.

ICASA justified the three-week response time in a media statement, saying the draft regulations were published in November 2009 for comment. ICASA is under pressure to issue the mobile TV licences in time for the Soccer World Cup, starting on 11 June 2010, because the government has made a commitment to controlling body, FIFA that there will be a mobile-TV service for the tournament.

On 25 April 2010, Mobile TV Consortium founding chairman Mothobi Mutloatse said it would consider legal action should its request for an extension not be granted. “If mobile television was required for the World Cup, then why did ICASA not make the mobile television regulations available a year ago? The regulations are not asking for vague information, they want detailed business, technical and marketing plans.” He said the deadline was biased towards existing television broadcast service licence holders, excluding new entrants from the broadcast space and limiting the competition envisioned in the Electronic Communications Act, and the Media Development and Diversity Act.

Mutloatse said 14 days’ turnaround time was unrealistic “unless a company was expecting the regulations as they appeared”. He said the consortium needed at least two months to make a submission. “It would normally take three months to satisfy ICASA’s requirements. “We would need to talk to other stakeholders such as mobile operators, and signal distributor Sentech, as well as test the systems. Had we known the content of the regulations a reasonable time ago we could have met the deadline.” He believes the consortium’s technology is superior to the DVB-H at present being tested in the market. ICASA spokesman Paseka Maleka said on 25 April 2010 that it had not yet received a letter from Mobile TV Consortium’s legal adviser. An extension was unlikely to be considered at this time.

ICASA initially invited companies to apply for the tender for two mobile TV licences in December 2008, but recalled the invitation two months later pending the finalisation of the terrestrial broadcast plan. ICASA then decided it should get comment on the draft mobile broadcasting regulations and did so.

The comments, from among others MultiChoice, SABC, e.tv, Neotel and Telkom, were used to amend the regulations. On 15 April 2010, ICASA issued the present invitation for applications, which are to be handed in by 4pm on 7 May 2010. ICASA intends completing the licensing process by June in time for the World Cup but accepts that “prospective licensees might not be ready to begin broadcasting at that time”.

ICASA plans to license broadcasters in one multiplex, made up of 12 TV channels, during the current financial year to March 2011. The licences for the second multiplex will be issued only once ICASA has decided on “the opening of the pay-TV market to new entities”. The Electronic Communication Act encourages investment and innovation in the communication sector, competition and the empowerment of disadvantaged persons.

Source: Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA)

2010 World Cup  South Africa's preparation to host the games on African soil for the first time but also individual African countries' determination to take part in the historic event. Five African countries - Cameroon, Nigeria, Algeria, South Africa and Ghana - are selected to join twenty seven teams from around the world to battle it out on the football pitch for the gold trophy. One by one, the African teams are eliminated, but Africans will not be bogged down as they rally behind their compatriots on the wings of the vuvuzela, a far cry from the near diplomatic row between Algeria and Egypt during the qualifiers. Ghana are the last team to leave but not before African unity becomes reality...
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