Philip, TV signal distribution is a backbone service that can be done even by any telco. The issuance of channels is the preserve of CCK. There are regulations governing the sector where by the distributor cannot hold more than 20% of the channels. There is no room where any distributor can dominate the market. We now have the greatest opportunity to address the mistakes we made before with spectrum management by allowing as many Kenyans to own the channels as possible. This is the reason why we are giving 3 signal distributor licences. It will bring the necessary competion that will benefit the consumer. Our job is to balance consumer interests and those of the investor. There is no policy to dis=criminate against any country let alone China. If it was, then the entire telkom sector will have to be sold to locals. Whether we can afford it is another matter but it would not be a prudent policy in country that needs FDI. I had told the local broadcasters to make a case for a review considering the investment they have made in which case we shall give the third licence to them but it seems they had a nother agenda. You recall we have been at this before when another foreign enterprises tried to bring competition. Further the more channels we have, the more employment we create since any free to air channell must have at least 40% local content. Any one will understand this simple explanation of our intentions. It is unfortunate that some of you are used to advance an agenda that is contra to your long term needs. Ni Mungu tu atatusaidia. Regards Ndemo.
Bwana PS, The intention is not to hit back, for there can never be any meaningful discussion in a situation of conflict.
Good to notice that you agree that corruption is destroying our country. First step is to accept. Thank you!
In 1961 when President Kennedy inaugurated an ambitious space exploration program in the US, he stated and I quote:
*"I believe we possess all the resources and talents necessary. But the facts of the matter are that we have never made the national decisions or marshaled the national resources required for such leadership. We have never specified long-range goals on an urgent time schedule, or managed our resources and our time so as to insure their fulfillment".* No need to over-emphasize the power that comes from strong and determined state policy for grand achievements. It is to say, let us examine where we are strong and where we are not; and make a decision as a country (with government leadership) that some products, some services, some technologies, some knowledge, some expertise must be home-grown!
For whichever considerations that make us "distribute local television signals" through a foreign firm; host public data in a foreign country....
If you were to resolve (your personal resolve and determination) that some of these things can be done here at home; would you not succeed? Would the Kenyan expertise fail you? What would be the ripple-effect of such an achievement to the local economy and know-how in the future?
lastly, you are right. I did not investigate the "true story about what was published". I have no capacity to do so. But the main thing I noticed and resented, lack of resolve to nature local talent.
Regards Philip
On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 8:41 PM, <bitange@jambo.co.ke> wrote:
Philip, I know there is corruption in this country but the conclusions you make are the ones that destroy this country. I wonder if you you tried to investigate and make an informed conclusion.
The write up did not meet basic journalistic principles in a case where the writer is an interested party. Did it occur to you that there is a glaring conflict of interest in the matter?
Indeed it will take generations before we learn not to make uninformed decisions.
Regards
Ndemo.
When you see "technicality" card being brandished, it simply means no one spoke to any body!
It will take generations before "we" learn to put our national interest above individualistic short-term gain interest. It is terrible, it is bad!
Regards Philip
On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 7:53 AM, aki <aki275@gmail.com> wrote:
Just been reading this article,
http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/Corporate+News/Nation++Royal+Media+lose+a... ,
and the print lacks the details but also a reflection is what is happening in developing countries.
Did the local media group have the technical and financial capability to operate signal distribution platforms and roll out the services, yet got dropped out because of tender technicalities. How is this possible? Are we saying kenyans are totally incapable of understanding the requirements or commitments of such national projects?
I hope the affected parties do an indepth review of why they lost out and share that information with kenyans. We need to know, because I'm sure the local media groups were also going to buy technology platforms and implement roll out so issues like delays due to internal manufacture or creation do not even arise.
Some thoughts.
Thank you.
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for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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-- Regards
Philip Adar
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