A bill meant to make broadcasting more competitive in the country was
passed through second reading in the House of Representatives Thursday.
The
bill sponsored by Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs,
Nnena Elendu- Ukeje is titled ” a bill for an Act to amend the National
Broadcast Commission Act cap N11, laws of the federation of Nigeria,
2014, to provide for competition in Nigeria, promote efficiency and
Expand opportunities for Nigerians’ participation in world markets while
at the same time recognize the role of foreign completion in Nigeria,
and for other matters related thereto.”
Elendu- Ukeje while
speaking on the bill said it is meant to strengthen the National
Broadcast Commission as an independent regulator.
According to
her, the bill will also create room for competition through
deregulation, liberalization, privatization, ensuring free market
operation and also enforce penalty(s) to parties that go against the
provisions of the law.
The piece of legislation, she said, will
prevent price or rate fixing, price discrimination , restrictive
exclusive content, abuse of dominant market position, and
unconstitutional boycotting.
The proposed law, she said,
is a remedy to the obvious lacuna in the NBC Act and strengthens the
NBC as Nigeria has no set of codified laws that speaks to the subject
matter.
Her words: “this is one sector that does not suffer from
customer ignorance as this sector has been subject to motions/ petitions
on the floor of parliament and litigations in the court of law.
“Justice
Chukwujeku Aneke of the a federal High Court had on May 28th 2015
dismissed a suit against DSTV over increase in subscription fees as
Nigeria is yet to have a codified set of rules promoting competition in
that market.
“Competition laws exist under different names in
different climes. From antitrust law in the US to anti monopoly laws in
China and Russia, and Trade law in the UK and Australia, the underlying
factor for these laws us consumer protection.”
According to her,
Fourth Schedule, Section 39(1) of the constitution of the federal
republic of Nigeria states expressly that every person shall be entitled
to own, establish and operate any medium for the dissemination of
information.
She said the institution went further in Section
16(2c) that “the state shall direct its policy towards ensuring that the
economic system is not operated in such a manner as to permit the concentration of wealth or
the means of production and exchange in the hands of few individuals or
groups.
“The intendment of these two provisions is that by
liberalizing communication and media, that the sector be competitive in
line with our economic policies.”
The bill passed through second reading without debate when the Speaker, Hon. Yakubu Dogara called for a voice vote.
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