Content in National Interest: What New TV Broadcast Guidelines Say
26-08-2023
12:21 PM
1 min read
What’s in today’s article:
- News Summary
Why in news?
- The Centre has approved new guidelines under which it has become obligatory for channels to telecast content of national interest and public importance.
News Summary
- Recently, the Union Cabinet has approved the ‘Guidelines for Uplinking and Downlinking of Satellite Television Channels in India, 2022’.
- The new guidelines have been amended after a gap of 11 years.
- Also, a number of steps have been taken for ease of doing business, as there are more than 890 channels operating in the country now.
Key highlights of the new guidelines
- Obligation for TV channels
- All TV channels in India, including private channels, are required to broadcast at least 30 minutes of content daily on themes of national importance and of social relevance.
- The Ministry will soon issue a specific advisory on the date it comes into effect, and on the time slots for the telecast of this content.
- 8 Themes of national importance and of social relevance
- education and spread of literacy;
- agriculture and rural development;
- health and family welfare;
- science and technology;
- welfare of women;
- welfare of the weaker sections of the society;
- protection of environment and of cultural heritage; and
- national integration.
- Exemptions given
- The condition applies to all channels, except where it may not be feasible, such as in the case of sports channels, wildlife channels, foreign channels etc.
- On Uplinking and downlinking
- Uplinking and downlinking shall be subject to clearance and approval by the Ministry of Home Affairs, and wherever considered necessary, of other authorities.
- The policy mandates that channels uplinking in frequency bands other than C-band must encrypt their signals.
- Broadcast companies will be allowed to uplink foreign channels from Indian teleports.
- This would create employment opportunities and make India a teleport hub for other countries.
- Currently, only 30 channels are uplinked from India out of the total 897 registered with the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.
- Currently, Singapore is considered the hub of teleport uplinking.
- However, after the new guidelines come into effect, foreign channels are expected to show greater interest in using Indian teleports.
- This would create employment opportunities and make India a teleport hub for other countries.
- Other aspects
- The new guidelines allow a news agency to get permission for five years instead of the current one year.
- The penalty clauses have been rationalised, and separate sets of penalties have been proposed for different types of contraventions as against the uniform penalty that is applicable currently.
- Requirement for seeking permission for the live telecast of events has been done away with; only prior registration of events to be telecast live would be necessary.
- Compliance mechanism
- The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting will monitor the channels for the broadcast of this content.
- In case non-compliance is observed in the Ministry’s view, an explanation will be sought.
- If a channel continues to be non-compliant, more steps can be taken based on specific advisories that will be issued from time to time, and on a case-to-case basis.
Rationale behind the new guidelines
- The government has argued that since airwaves/ frequencies are public property they need to be used in the best interest of the society.
- However, analysts criticize this move by saying the, while airwaves may be public property, broadcasters had paid hefty fees for their use.
- Any binding guidelines that adversely impact their commercial interests may not, therefore, be fair.