position: EnglishChannel  > Cooperation> Satellite TV Project Benefits African Villages

Satellite TV Project Benefits African Villages

Source: Science and Technology Daily | 2023-02-16 10:42:18 | Author: Science and Technology Daily


Satellite receivers?are?installed?in?a?village?in?Burundi,?Oct.?31,?2022.?(PHOTO:?XINHUA)

By?WANG?Xiaoxia

Access to information is not the privilege of a minority, but a fundamental human right that is of equal importance to personal safety, clean drinking water and affordable healthcare. Satellite television can provide this access to people in rural areas, said Zambian President Edgar Lungu at a launch ceremony of a China-aided satellite TV project.

Access to Satellite TV for 10,000 African Villages is a China-Africa cooperation project that aims to reduce the digital divide in African rural areas by giving villages access to digital television. As of December 2022, the project had been completed in 21 African countries, covering 9,512 villages and benefiting more than 190,000 households.

Chinese digital TV operator StarTimes installed satellite receivers to relay signals, and provide an affordable service. In Zambia, it now costs just 30 kwachas (1.60 USD) per month to watch TV programs, 75 percent less than previously.

Apart from entertainment, TV is also a tool for people to understand the changing world and develop their hometowns with more advanced technology. In Burundi, a farmer named Hatungimana watched a modern farming program on satellite television and immediately learned how to build a pigsty and raise piglets.?

Satellite TV has also helped improve local educational conditions. Students can receive the latest information from around the world, and become more interested in learning.

The project has not only connected African villages with the world, but also trained local specialists who can master the technology's operation, installation and after-sales services. The project has trained more than 20,000 local technicians in Africa and increased their income, while laying a solid foundation for the development of related industries.

Editor:王晓夏

Top News

  • ?Emerging technologies like AI, big data and the Internet of Things are rapidly reshaping the world in this era of digital intelligence. However, they are also bringing challenges to human rights, which makes joint efforts essential. Science and Technology Daily spoke with international experts on these issues against the backdrop of the 2025 China-Europe Seminar on Human Rights hosted by the China Society for Human Rights Studies and Cátedra China Foundation in Madrid, Spain, on June 25 on the theme "Human Rights in the Era of Digital Intelligence."

First Human Clinical Trial of Invasive BCI in China

A major breakthrough in neurotechnology has been achieved with the successful completion of China's first-in-human clinical trial of an invasive brain-computer interface (BCI) system. With that China becomes the second country in the world to reach the clinical stage in this field.

GTCOM Establishes a Strategic Partnership with ITBM to Co-Build Malaysia’s National AI Translation Platform

On June 18, 2025, during the 31st Beijing International Book Fair (BIBF), Global Tone Communication Technology Co., Ltd. (GTCOM) and Malaysian Institute of Translation & Books (ITBM) held a strategic cooperation signing ceremony at China National Convention Center (CNCC), officially launching the development of Malaysia’s National AI Translation Platform.

抱歉,您使用的浏览器版本过低或开启了浏览器兼容模式,这会影响您正常浏览本网页

您可以进行以下操作:

1.将浏览器切换回极速模式

2.点击下面图标升级或更换您的浏览器

3.暂不升级,继续浏览

继续浏览