Audio By Carbonatix
A Senior Broadcast Journalist at the Multimedia Group's JoyNews, Kwaku Asante, has proposed that the National Media Commission (NMC) be given the mandate to authorise broadcast frequencies and assign spectrum, a responsibility currently under the National Communications Authority (NCA).
Appearing before the Constitutional Review Committee in Accra on Tuesday, May 14, he argued that the current arrangement has made frequency allocation susceptible to political interference, given the NCA’s limited focus on media-related issues.
“When it comes to authorisation, particularly in frequency allocation, I believe that mandate should be taken from the National Communications Authority (NCA),” he told the committee.
I appeared before the Constitutional Review Committee and shared my perspectives towards reviewing the Constitution. The focus was mainly on media but I shared my two cents on inclusion of private associations in the Constitution, exercise of Presidential powers etc. Watch: pic.twitter.com/QxXkRvVlHH
— Kwaku Asante (@kwakuasanteb) May 14, 2025
“Over the years, the NCA has shifted focus to other areas, placing very little emphasis on media regulation. Frequency authorisation has essentially become a tool for political control.”
The journalist, who reports from Parliament, noted that many lawmakers own media outlets and often struggle to retain or access frequency authorisations when they lose political power.
“I know that nearly half of the Members of Parliament own media houses. When they lose power, it becomes difficult for them to access authorisations unless they meet certain political conditions,” he said.
Kwaku Asante recommended that only the frequency authorisation function be moved to the NMC, without merging the two institutions.
He said the NMC, by its constitutional design and media-focused mandate, is better placed to regulate the broadcasting space fairly and professionally.
He also urged the Committee to consider designing a framework for judicial review of the NMC's decisions.
While he expressed reservations about giving the Commission the power to summon or compel attendance, he emphasised the importance of legal checks on its decisions.
“We need to design a legal framework that allows decisions made by the National Media Commission to be appealed, for example, to the High Court. This would ensure that individuals who believe the NMC lacks the necessary expertise to handle certain matters have an alternative forum for redress,” he said.
Kwaku Asante, a Senior Journalist with Multimedia Group Limited, was among journalists who were invited by the Professor H. Kwasi Prempeh-led Constitutional Review Committee to share their perspectives on reviewing the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana and The Gambia strengthen education partnership through high-level study visit
4 minutes -
Group planned to attack White House UFC event using snipers and drones, FBI says
5 minutes -
One dead in Truck and Saloon car collision at Ako Adjei interchange
7 minutes -
The Inconvenient Truth: Democracy cannot succeed where political parties need failure to survive
8 minutes -
More than a dozen horses killed in New York barn fire
9 minutes -
Agyeman-Rawlings family condoles with Gbeho family after death of James Victor Gbeho
9 minutes -
Russian artist and Putin critic shot dead in Poland
9 minutes -
Norway’s crown princess undergoes successful lung transplant, palace says
12 minutes -
Tema Police arrest two suspects over 56 sacks of suspected indian hemp at Afienya
12 minutes -
National Blood Service donates 1,000 children’s clothing to Korle-Bu teaching hospital
26 minutes -
Ecobank Ghana posts strong 2025 performance as profit rises 28% to GH¢3bn
35 minutes -
Is Da’wah misunderstood and misrepresented in Islam? – Queen Liz show explores core meaning and practice of Islamic outreach
36 minutes -
Israel launches fresh strikes on Lebanon despite Trump criticism
40 minutes -
Status quo at Jerusalem’s holiest site under threat as Israeli nationalists flout rules
40 minutes -
Equatorial Guinea government resigns after failing to meet targets
41 minutes