GTV logo.[Photo/Nation]
It has been a decade since its surprise exit from the market and now GTV wants to come back on Kenyan television.
According to the Communication Authority of Kenya (CA), GTV has applied for a licence to broadcast free transmission.
“Notice is given that the following applicant has made an application to the Communications Authority of Kenya for the grant of a licence (commercial free to air TV broadcasting),” acting CA Director General Timothy Kemei said in a Gazette notice last week.
GTV shocked subscribers when it stopped its operations without notice at the beginning of 2009. They only received a short message telling them the channel had gone off the air.
“Increased instability in global markets has interrupted our ability to secure funding on an acceptable time scale and has left us no choice but to cease operations,” the statement read.
During their exit, the pay TV network did not pay back its subscribers, who were left holding unoperational decoders. The firm alleged that it closed shop after lacking to get adequate finances for its operations.
Swedish firm, Investment AB Kinnevik, with a major stake in the venture, and which had committed its funds to the longer term, suddenly offloaded its stake, worth $23.6 million (Sh24 billion), to Vodacom of South Africa GTV’s swift collapse left about 11,000 employees, spread across 22 African countries jobless.
Three years later, another pay-TV provider, Smart TV, closed shop after failing to secure enough funds for its operations after the exit of Swedish investors.