Hon Mary Navicha |
The
Malawi National Assembly has passed an Act requiring all local broadcasting houses
play 70 percent of local music and 30 percent foreign music.
The
House on Thursday agreed to the motion from honourable Mary Navicha member for
Thyolo Thava who moved “That considering how Malawian
artists, especially musicians have been suffering and are still suffering, this
House resolves that, there should be a deliberate Government policy to empower
the musicians by among others, providing that all Television and Radio
Broadcasting Houses in the country, especially the public owned broadcasting
houses, should be airing a big portion of the Malawian music in order to enable
our musicians collect enough proceeds from the Copyright Society of Malawi.”
The
motion found its way came back again in the house through hon. Navicha after it
was turned back last week Thursday when Blantyre City South, honourable AllanNgumuya who drafted the motion was denied to present the motion in the House because
he is an interested party as he is a musician.
“We
need to promote our Malawian music and support our local musicians” stressed
Navicha when presenting the motion in the House
“Our
artists are really suffering yet they put much effort to produce their art but sadly
at the end they get nothing.” She observed when speaking in an interview
The
motion has been referred to the relevant committees just to refine the Act and the
Ministry of Civic Education and Culture will take responsibility of ensuring
that the agreed Act becomes effective policy and is enforced.
Hon Patricia Kaliati |
Honourable
Patricia Kaliati Minister of Civic Education and Culture who will be
responsible for implementation of the Policy said this motion is a welcome idea
and it shows that “our members of parliament are really passionate with skills
that our artists are having and how they are also promoting the economy of the
country” by imparting such skills to youth and create employment.
She
said what remains is a policy to give her Ministry a direction that guide how
it will follow up the airplay of 70 percent local music and 30 percent foreign
music.
However,
she noted that the only challenge now is the willingness of local broadcasting
houses to commit themselves to pay royalties to artists. She said a lot of
artists die poor because of this problem and that currently both private and public
broadcasting houses “owe artists over K120 million.”
But
she expressed optimism that this motion will empower the ministry to force the
broadcasting houses pay royalties to the artists even to beneficiaries
(bereaved families of artists).
“It
is really pathetic from what I have heard that some of them [artists] have
passed on without getting their royalty and they ended up being beggars yet
they have their royalties from different radio stations. But this is a good
motion which we have just passed in parliament. What we are looking forward is
to start implementing because it is now an Act as we are speaking” she said
Kaliati
has emphasised that her ministry will work with Copyright Society of Malawi (CoSoMa)
on this Act pushing broadcasting houses to start paying the royalties owed to
artists. And warned that “If they don’t want then we will sue them.”
She
also spoke at length that this policy will assist the implementation of the
recently passed copyright law in fighting piracy which has greatly choked the
music industry in the country.
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