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NEW DELHI: With growing pressure following the infamous Uma Khurana
sting operation, broadcasters are working towards finalising their
Content Code before the end of this month, and the Indian Broadcasting
Foundation (IBF) has convened a meeting early next week to discuss
the issue.
The News Broadcasters Association (NBA) has already indicated
to the information and broadcasting ministry that it will finalise
its Code by the end of January.
The ministry is itself under a direction from the Delhi High Court
to give its views on the status of an attempt to bring in a regulation.
In a decision given last month, the High Court, while responding
to a set of PILs, had asked the ministry to come with its response
within ten weeks.
Accordingly, the ministry has called a meeting of stakeholders
in the second half of this month to take their inputs, an official
said.
According to an IBF official, a preliminary draft is ready but
will be subjected to threadbare discussion at the Mumbai meeting
following which a final version may be drafted to be submitted
to the ministry.
NBA claims it has already formulated its own code and a grievance
redressal mechanism and handed over the draft to senior advocate
and former solicitor general of India Harish Salve, who is helping
the association in the preparation of the code. ''Since, we deal
with the news and current affairs, our issues are very different.
The IBF is drafting a code relating to entertainment programmes
which would require different parameters,'' an NBA official said.
The Editors Guild is also working on a model code and a self-regulation
mechanism.
The government had prepared a Content Code with the help of various
stakeholders and even placed it on the Ministrys website
mib.nic.in for comments and fixed a final date of 5 August, 2007
for this purpose, but met with stiff resistance.
The fake sting operation resulted in the Courts intervening and
the ministry stepping up pressure for some regulation in the broadcasting
sector, even as the Broadcasting Services Regulation Bill remains
in cold storage.
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