Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of Information, says government has no intention of privatising the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC), the only public broadcaster.
Mr. Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah, therefore, asked staff of the GBC to ignore that suspicion and clearly define the Corporation's identity to remain relevant in the contemporary media landscape.
The Minister gave the advice at a durbar organised at the GBC headquarters in Accra when he paid a working visit to the facility.
Staff of the GBC had questioned the rationale for “government’s intention to hand over GBC to private entities to manage,” describing the alleged intention and step as unfair to staff of GBC, especially the long serving ones in the quest to move from analogue to digital.
The Minister said transforming GBC did not lie only in the hands of the Minister or the Corporation’s Board Chairman, but required a concerted and collective approach from all stakeholders.
Professor Amin Alhassan, Director-General, GBC, said out of the 23 local languages that the GBC broadcast in, only three were profitable and only two of the eight studios in the Corporation worked effectively.
He said the GBC required a deliberate government intervention in key areas like procuring of equipment, payment of electricity, as well as funding for their long-service award programme to be more productive.
During an interaction with other staff members of the Public Service Broadcaster, they petitioned the Minister to work towards ensuring that they got a sustainable funding to operate the Corporation.
Others called on government to let their single spine reflect in percentages in their salaries, and put in place realistic scheme of service and clearly defined ways that staff were expected to work.
They also required measures to promote accountability, efficiency and provide proper remuneration for the staff of the Corporation.
“A staff can be working for 10 years without promotion on the basis that the Corporation is not getting budget from government. This kills our spirit and deters us from giving off our best,” a staff said.
Mrs. Cynthia Mamle Morrison, Chairperson, Parliamentary Select Committee on Communications, said the Committee acknowledged the hard work and dedication of those in the state-owned media, hence was ready to support government to promote their growth.
“However, I believe every one of you here has to demonstrate positively to uplift the image of GBC so that by its 90th birthday, it will be a new GBC,” she said.
Latest Stories
-
Police arrest man over alleged sale of 3-year-old son for GH¢1m
2 minutes -
Asiedu Nketia calls for investigation into cocoa sack procurement under ex-government
6 minutes -
Ghanaians divided over DStv upgrades as government ramps up anti-piracy war
10 minutes -
African exporters face tariff shock as U.S. eyes AGOA Extension Bill
19 minutes -
Vanity, Power, Greed, and the People We Forgot to empower
23 minutes -
Economic recovery puts Ghana on track to end IMF oversight
25 minutes -
Health Minister directs teaching hospitals to operate 24-hour OPD and lab services
44 minutes -
Drivers association warns against excessive sales targets, speeding amid rising road crashes
50 minutes -
Drivers association urges gov’t to invest in alternative transport to curb road crashes
57 minutes -
Dollar demand picks up as businesses restock for the rest of the year
1 hour -
WHO urges higher taxes on tobacco, alcohol, sugary drinks
1 hour -
Legal and constitutional assessment of Ghana’s Gold-For-Reserves Programme
2 hours -
Why Goldbod should not be judged by textbook economics
2 hours -
Surrogate mother delivers quadruplets – Rare in assisted reproductive technology
2 hours -
Global growth to fall to 2.6% in 2026 – World Bank
2 hours
