Setting the Records Straight: The Technical, Legal, and Regulatory Truth Behind Parliament’s New DTT Channel

ACCRA, GHANA — In a rapidly evolving digital media landscape, accurate public information is the bedrock of national development and democratic governance. Recent discourse surrounding how the Parliament of Ghana secured its television slot on the National Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT) platform has sparked vital conversations. To ensure Ghanaians are accurately informed, it is essential to clarify the technical, legal, and administrative pathways that enabled this historic broadcasting milestone.

Far from bypassing established state protocols, the integration of the parliamentary channel stands as a prime example of inter-institutional collaboration. By utilizing the existing infrastructure of the state broadcaster, the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC), and operating strictly under the regulatory oversight of the Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation (MoCD) and the National Communications Authority (NCA), this initiative sets a benchmark for efficient resource management in public interest broadcasting.

The Technical Reality: How the Channel Was Secured

From an institutional and infrastructural perspective, the deployment of the parliamentary channel was executed through a strategic partnership within the public sector, optimizing state resources rather than creating redundant infrastructure.

Underscoring the collaborative and lawful nature of this technical arrangement, the Director-General of GBC, Prof. Amin Alhassan, stated:

"Parliament passed through GBC to secure a space on the National DTT (T2) and the GBC-operated DTT (T1). GBC gave out its Learning Channel (GLTV) to Parliament to operate its channel. Parliament cannot bypass the Ministry of Communications and the NCA."

The Legal Framework: The Regulatory Roles of MoCD and NCA

Under Ghanaian law, no state agency, including Parliament, can independently establish a broadcast presence on the national spectrum without clearing strict statutory hurdles. The process strictly respected the mandates of Ghana's communication regulators:

Aligning with International Best Practices

The collaboration between GBC and Parliament mirrors global standards for public service broadcasting and digital spectrum management.

Commitment to Public Transparency and Information Accessibility

A core tenet of modern democratic governance is the right to information. For public sector partnerships to remain accountable, structural details regarding national spectrum agreements must be completely transparent.

Strategic Recommendations for Ghana’s Broadcasting Future

To build upon this success and secure the long-term viability of Ghana's DTT ecosystem, the following policy interventions are recommended:

The entry of Parliament into the national DTT space is a triumph of regulatory adherence and institutional synergy. By working within the lawful boundaries managed by the Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation and the NCA, and by leveraging GBC’s existing T1 and T2 multiplex infrastructure, the state has demonstrated how to deploy public assets responsibly. This milestone does more than just inform the public; it deepens Ghanaian democracy, honors international communication standards, and provides a clear, sustainable blueprint for the future of public service broadcasting in Africa.

✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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