Media Release19 May 2022
JOHANNESBURG, 19 May 2022 - Media Monitoring Africa (MMA) and SOS Support Public Broadcasting Coalition will be in the Constitutional Court on Friday the 20th of May 2022. MMA and SOS have applied for direct access to the Constitutional Court in a matter involving the Department of Communications and Digital Technologies (DCDT)’s decision to switch off the analogue signal. We will argue that should the Analogue Switch Off (ASO) go ahead, the rights of the most marginalised South Africans will be violated as millions will be left without access to television.
SOS and MMA believe that the right to freedom of expression enshrined in the constitutionwill clearly be violated should the ASO go ahead as planned. The South African Constitutionin the Bill of Rights, section 16(1) states that everyone has a right to freedom of expression,which includes “freedom to receive or impart information or ideas”. Following our previouscourt submissions, it is undisputed that millions will be left in the dark, should the migrationprocess proceed, which will be a violation of their basic human right. Freedom of expressionis an integral part of our democracy and a constitutional right inherited by every citizen andwithout it, citizens are not able to make informed decisions pertaining to political, economicor social factors, and are subsequently prohibited from excising their democratic rights.Currently, 5.7 million (36% of the television audience) South Africans, cannot self-migratedue to their socio-economic status (These figures are from the Broadcast Research Counciland were presented by MMA and SOS in court, they were not challenged or disputed by anyparty). The government has on various occasions, publicly committed itself to help thoseincapable of self-migration, it identified households earning less that R3500 as indigent,qualifying for a free Set Top Box (STB). The Minister has stated that out of the 3.7 millionhouseholds that qualify for the subsidy only 1.2 million have registered, meaning thatapproximately 2.5 million South African households eligible for the subsidy have notregistered and they will experience the interminable broadcast loadshedding upon the ASO.To make matters worse, it seems nearly impossible that the DCDT will be able to ensure thateven the 1.2million registered households will have their set top boxes installed andworking by the end of June. Depriving the poor of their right to access information isunconstitutional and unacceptable, and all the more egregious given that it will deepen thedigital divide. As key proponents of freedom of expression and equality, it is essential thatwe seek to bridge the digital divide and reduce inequality, not deepen it – which the ASO, ifit goes ahead on the irrational timeline presented will undeniably achieve.To be clear, both MMA and SOS support the shift to digital and that is why we haverepeatedly called for access to the internet as a right to be realized. There is therefore nodebate about the need to move to digital but we cannot tolerate a decision by governmentthat would seek to leave millions behind facing interminable tv loadshedding.Moreover, apart from the 2.5 million, there are hundreds of thousands of householdswhose income exceeds R3 500 yet they are still incapable of self-migration.There can be no doubt that the ASO migration undermines and degrades the poor, it marginalizes them further and it will be detrimental to the democratic values entrenched in the constitution.In terms of Section 7(2) of the constitution, the minister is obligated to respect, protect,promote and fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights. In regard to respect, this obligationprohibits all organs of state from interfering with or violating any constitutional right. TheMinister’s plan of action to proceed with the ASO at the expense of the impoverished alsoviolates the constitutional rights of the citizens of this country and blatantly undermines theconstitution. Our plea is that the Minister puts on hold the ASO until appropriateimplementation strategies which are cognizant of the poor and the dynamics of the sectorare put in place.To date, no reasons have been put forward for the date selected by the DCDT. Of course,part of the reason for the urgency is that the digital spectrum has already been auctionedoff by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) to 6 biddersincluding Vodacom and MTN, collecting a revenue of R14,4 billion. The mobile operators'frustration with ICASA and the DCDT is understandable. The obvious question is why didn’tthe DCDT start implementing the plans for ASO 3 years ago with the kind of vigour andurgency they are displaying now?We reiterate our call to the Minister to delay the ASO until the 3.7 million indigenthouseholds (registered and unregistered) have their STB’s installed and working. We alsoreiterate our call for the roll out to be evaluated and monitored, with systems in place toensure progress and accountability. The Minister must also make efforts to understand theplight of the underprivileged and the media sector.We are hopeful that the Constitutional Court will grant the litigants direct access as westrongly believe that the constitution is being undermined and the rights of South Africansare being violated.Digital migration is a process of moving (migrating) from the use of analogue forms ofbroadcasting to digital ones which will cease all analogue television broadcasting. Theprocess of digital migration in South Africa started approximately 16 years ago, in 2006. Theaim was to complete it by 2011 but the process has suffered many setbacks and thegovernment missed that first target for completion and the second target of June 2015. For5 years (from 2015), the government was completely silent about the ASO date until year2021 when the Minister gazetted the 31 st of March 2022 as ‘the’ date. The ASO date waspushed to 30 June 2022 by the High Court (which also instructed the Minister to install507 000 STB’s before the stated deadline) in a case where MMA and SOS requestedpostponement of the ASO date until all mandatory installations have been completeds, toprevent the poor from being cut off from public service content. For further information, please contact:William Bird, Media Monitoring Africa, Tel: 011 7881278, williamb@mma.org.zaUyanda Siyothula, SOS Support Public Broadcasting Coalition, Tel: 060 691 2462, Natcoord@soscoalition.org.za