LIFE / CULTURE
StarTimes satellite TV project to benefit 400 villages throughout Uganda
Published: Aug 23, 2021 06:43 PM
China on Saturday launched the second phase of a satellite TV project that will be implemented and provide TV services in over 400 villages in Uganda.

Jiang Jiqing, economic and commercial counselor at the Chinese Embassy in Uganda, said the project is critical, especially for students in rural areas that have difficulty in accessing education information.

"I know a number of schools have been closed because of this pandemic but education and schooling will not stop with the help of these StarTimes TV programs," Jiang said. 

StarTimes TV, a Chinese-owned pay television service provider, will air education programs among others through satellite television.

Song Wei, project director at StarTimes, said connecting villages will start in August and end before December 25.

Song said homes, public places, schools and offices will be connected with satellite television sets.

"We hope the project will become the bridge of longtime friendship between Chinese and Ugandans," Song said.

Paul Odoi, principal engineer at Uganda's ministry of information and communication technology, said the project is in line with the government's Parish Development Model, which aims to make services more accessible to the people.

The first phase of the project has benefited over 500 villages and more than 500,000 people in Uganda. The second phase started with the training of engineers who are going to fix the satellite TV facilities in the villages.

The project is one of the fruits of the resolutions of the 2015 summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation held in Johannesburg, South Africa, at which the Chinese government pledged to provide satellite TV to 10,000 African villages.