Tag Archives: KFCB

Internship Opportunities at the Kenya Film Classification Board for 2019/2020 Financial Year

The Kenya Film Classification Board is a state corporation that operates under the Government of Kenya whose mandate is to “regulate the creation, broadcasting, possession, distribution and exhibition of films by rating them.”

The Public Service Internship Programme (PSIP) is a Government initiative designed to offer internship opportunities for college graduates to acquire and develop valuable technical and professional skills while gaining requisite work experience. The programme is also aimed at inculcating in the interns values and principles of public service and to promote ethical conduct.

The Kenya Film Classification Board is pleased to announce to the general public the recruitment of interns, scheduled to take place in the month of September, 2019 in the following Disciplines; Communication, Supply Chain Management, Human Resource & Administration, Finance & Accounting, Planning, Legal services and ICT.

Qualifications

  1. Be a Kenyan Citizen aged between 20 and 34 years;
  2. Have graduated with a first Degree (undergraduate) or Diploma from a recognized institution between July 2018 and June, 2019;
  3. Must be available on full time basis for the six months’ duration of the program;
  4. Be proficient in computer skills; and
  5. Should not have undertaken any other internship or exposed to work experience after graduation.

Responsibilities

  1. Completing duties mutually agreed upon and assigned by the supervisors;
  2. Documenting relevant skills acquired in their areas of deployment; and
  3. Actively participating in activities designed for purposes of mentorship.

Requirements

Once selected, candidates will be required to submit proof of a valid personal accident insurance cover, valid Certificate of Good Conduct, Copies of KRA PIN Certificate, NHIF, NSSF, ID Card & Bank Account Details

Stipend

The intern will be paid a stipend at a rate to be determined by the Public Service Commission that is subject to statutory deduction.

Certificate

On successful completion of the Internship Programme, the intern will be given a certificate.

Application Procedure

Suitably qualified candidates are required to send their hard copies applications to:

The Chief Executive Officer,

Kenya Film Classification Board,

Uchumi House, 15th Floor,

P.O Box 44226-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.

Click here to Download: Internship Opportunities for 2019/2020

Deadline for receipt of the applications is 17th September, 2019 at 5pm

STATE OF FILM IN KENYA: KFCB LICENSED CLOSE TO 700 FILMS IN 2018.

The Kenya Films Classification Board, Kfcb, licensed nearly 700 and rated over 1000 films in 2018. This is the highest number of films to be licensed in Kenya and it’s more than thrice the number of films shot in Kenya before the Board took over the film licensing function two years ago.

Here is the list of the licensed films:

Kenya Film Classification Board, KFCB, to award one million Shillings to any Kenyan who will hit 1 million Subscribers on You Tube

The Kenya Film Classification Board, KFCB, will give KSh. 1 million to clean content creators who hit the one million subscribers mark. This is in a bid to promote the creation of clean content as the Board rolls out a promotion dubbed, ‘Sinema Mashinani’.

KFCB Sinema Mashinani Concept

The Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) is a State Corporation under the Ministry of Information, Communication and Technology. The Board is mandated by the Film and Stage Plays Act Cap222 to regulate film and broadcast content to promote culture and values as well as to protect children from exposure to harmful content. The Board appreciates that the creative industry is among the largest contributors of income to the global economy today. In 2013, a UNESCO report showed that the creative economy employed close to 30 million people across the world.

According to the survey, the industry generated $2.25 trillion in revenue, accounting for 3 percent of the world’s GDP as at the end of 2013. In December 2015, a study commissioned by the International Confederation of Authors and Composers’ Societies (CISAC) revealed that Africa and the Middle East region had attained a revenue output capacity level of $ 58 billion, creating 2.4 million jobs. The study established that African music was playing a central role in the development of popular music in North America, South America, and Europe.

According to the study’s findings, film production has turned into a significant driving force in creation of employment opportunities with reference striking successes such as Nigeria’s Nollywood, which provides direct employment to an estimated 300,000 people. With advances in technology and continued investment into the industry, these figures are expected to rise.

The Nigerian film industry, also known as “Nollywood,” produces about 50 movies per week, second only to India’s Bollywood and ahead of Hollywood. Although Nollywood’s revenues trail those of Bollywood and Hollywood at the global box office ($1.6 billion and $9.8 billion in 2012, respectively), Nollywood still generates, on average, $600 million annually for the Nigerian economy, with most of these receipts coming from the African diaspora. It is estimated that over one million people are currently employed in the industry (excluding pirates), which makes Nollywood Nigeria’s largest employer after oil and agriculture. In Kenya, the film industry is estimated to be having a potential to generate KSh.200 billion annually.

Despite this huge revenue output and job creation capacity, most of the opportunities available in the industry are yet to be exploited. Considering the impact this potential could make in transforming the country, it behoves institutions in both the public and private sectors to create initiatives to facilitate the country to tap into the huge pool of talent, and to inspire enterprise in the creative economy. Indeed, Kenya boasts a highly talented youth population, particularly in the arts. These talents need to be pooled together into a national economic force to transform the country by contributing to the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP) through job creation. In tapping into the creative talent potential of the youth, the Board is rolling out the Sinema Mashinani project, which aims at encouraging enterprises in the creative sector by identifying and nurturing talents across the country.

The project, which will be rolled across the country, also seeks to facilitate production of films in vernacular, celebrating the Kenya’s cultural and linguistic diversity. The implementation of the Sinema Mashinani project is designed to address various challenges in the industry. These include the dearth of adequate facilities for training and nurturing talent, lack of sufficient access to film production equipment, and poor access to platforms for showcasing creative talents. These aspects have inhibited an optimum exploitation of the potential of the creative industry.

Through the initiative, KFCB aims at facilitating the production of more local content to help local broadcasters to achieve the 60 percent local content threshold required by the Programming Code for free-to-air Radio and Television Services in Kenya by 2018. Access to content in some rural areas is also a challenge in light of the high cost of appropriate receivers and lack of connectivity to the grid. This denies citizens the opportunity to enjoy informative and educative content such as how to boost agricultural production given that Kenya is largely an agricultural economy.

To mitigate these challenges, the Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) intends to acquire modern equipment to enable access to content in the grassroots. This will be done through free mobile cinema theatres in every county. The Board will also set up talent academies in each county to identify and nurture creative talents among the youth even in the rural areas. With increased interest in Kenya as a filming destination, the partnership will also enhance surveillance and inspection of filming activities to ensure national security in light of the rising use of film by unscrupulous entities to promote terrorist activities.

Marie Stopes clinic ordered not to advertise, procure abortions

The Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board has, today 16th November 2018, ordered Marie Stopes clinic to immediately stop offering any form of abortion services in all its facilities in Kenya. This is contained in a communique by the Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board after a public outcry against Marie Stopes Clinics.

In its directives, the board orders that;

  • Marie Stopes Kenya to immediately cease and desist offering any form of abortion services in all its facilities within the Republic of Kenya,
  • Marie Stopes Kenya to submit weekly returns to the Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board over the next sixty days for all services rendered within all its facilities,
  • The clinic to review its existing guidelines for reproductive health services which should be in conformity with the law. The draft guidelines shall be submitted to the Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board within the next sixty days for its approval,
  • Marie Stopes Kenya has admonished for contravening the Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board rules on advertisements,
  • The Clinic is directed to pull down the misleading information on its current website and any other information channels with immediate effect,
  • Marie Stopes Kenya to separate the Health service delivery function from the advocacy programme forthwith,
  • Marie Stopes Kenya to provide the chairman the Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board with evidence of compliance with orders issued among other directives.

According to the Kenya Films Classification Board, KFCB, Chairman (Dr. Ezekiel Mutua), ‘the  advert was not submitted to the Board for examination and classification and therefore in breach of the law.’

“The adverts contravenes Section 3 of the Programming Code for Free-to-Air Radio and Television Services in Kenya and Regulation 34 of the Kenya Information and Communication Act. Despite the ban by the Board on the abortion adverts, continued to run them with impunity on several media outlets.” says Dr. Mutua.

Dr. Mutua hails the move by the, Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentist Board, KMPDU, to stop  saying it ‘is a major gain in the campaign for morality that has been spearheaded by KFCB. All broadcast content has to conform to existing laws.’

Marie Stopes Kenya has been advocating for young girls to procure abortions under the guise of providing healthcare services in the country causing a public outcry. Marie Stopes Kenya works through a network of 22 clinics and 15 mobile outreach clinics, as well as thir network of Amua clinics across Kenya. Some of the services offered by these clinics include

Photo- Marie Stopes Kenya advert on ending Teenage Pregnancies.