That cheap decoder hustle just got loud warnings, and regulators are basically saying enjoy it while you can.
What set this off
What set this off
- Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe is fed up with illegal TV services popping up everywhere.
- The agency is openly threatening legal action, not gentle reminders.
- The tone is very much last warning energy.
- Names being flagged include OVHD, StarSat, DigiSat, Mediastar, and Senator.
- These boxes are being sold and used outside the law.
- If it looks like a shortcut to premium channels, it probably is.
- Matthias Chakanyuka signed off on the statement dated January 22, 2026.
- He described the situation as an ongoing and blatant breach of broadcasting rules.
- The concern is not new, but patience is clearly gone.
- Some operators are running shady subscription setups.
- Users get access to pirated content without proper licenses.
- That setup is being blamed for hurting the legit broadcasting industry.
- Chakanyuka pointed straight to the Broadcasting Services Act.
- No license means no broadcasting, full stop.
- This applies to sellers, middlemen, and anyone helping distribute the service.
- Selling boxes is regulated, not a free-for-all.
- All set-top-box suppliers must go through a type approval process.
- That requirement sits under the Broadcasting Services Regulations of 2020.
- BAZ says it is ready to investigate, prosecute, and follow cases through.
- Selling, distributing, or even using these decoders counts as a violation.
- The message is enforcement first, excuses later.
- Buyers and subscribers are being told to walk away from illegal services.
- Using these promotes unlawful activity and undercuts licensed players.
- Ignorance is not being treated as a defense.
- A broadcasting space that is lawful and properly regulated.
- Protection for consumers and licensed broadcasters.
- A clear signal that the gray market is running out of room.