News / National
Zimbabweans to continue watching free to air SABC channels
19 Jun 2012 at 05:32hrs | Views
Zimbabweans viewing free-to-air South African TV channels are likely to continue receiving the service for several more months after a South African firm responsible for the signal challenged a court ruling directing it to end the piracy.
The three-month transmission grace period ended on May 31, but Sentech have appealed against the court ruling â€" meaning millions of people in the SADC region who receive the free channels including SABC 1, 2 and 3 will continue to do so pending the outcome of the appeal.
SABC say they have no control over the signal, and lay the blame squarely at the feet of Sentech.
eBotswana General Manager Dave Coles said Monday that Sentech lodged the appeal in May, and had so far not paid the P10 million damages award nor encrypted its signal.
Botswana broadcaster eBotswana, a sister channel to South Africa's etv, won a lawsuit in the Johannesburg High Court in February against the state-owned signal carrier, Sentech.
The court ordered Sentech to "take all reasonable steps necessary" to encrypt its signal within the next three months, after finding it guilty of being "wrongful, negligent and in breach" over its failure to prevent broadcast piracy.
The three-month transmission grace period ended on May 31, but Sentech have appealed against the court ruling â€" meaning millions of people in the SADC region who receive the free channels including SABC 1, 2 and 3 will continue to do so pending the outcome of the appeal.
SABC say they have no control over the signal, and lay the blame squarely at the feet of Sentech.
Botswana broadcaster eBotswana, a sister channel to South Africa's etv, won a lawsuit in the Johannesburg High Court in February against the state-owned signal carrier, Sentech.
The court ordered Sentech to "take all reasonable steps necessary" to encrypt its signal within the next three months, after finding it guilty of being "wrongful, negligent and in breach" over its failure to prevent broadcast piracy.
Source - Online