• Fresh cabinet nod for FM Phase III auction in few weeks

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 16
    indiantelevision.com Team

    New Delhi: A fresh approval of the union cabinet will be sought for the maiden e-auction of Phase III of FM Radio licences as certain new aspects have come to light after the earlier clearance.

    The Information and Broadcasting Ministry has prepared a note that encompasses the news aspects and circulated it to the concerned ministries/departments for their views, before it is put up for approval of the cabinet in the next few weeks.

    The Information and Broadcasting ministry has said issues such as charging of migration fee from existing permission holders, and specific departures in the Requests for Proposals (RFP) from agencies interested in conducting the e-auction on behalf of the ministry, had not been taken into account when the cabinet approval for the Phase III auctions were obtained on 7 July last year.

    The issues relating to the e-auction were pointed out by the inter-ministerial committee set up in November last year and headed by the then additional secretary in the I&B Ministry Rajiv Takroo.

    The nine-member committee, with I&B joint secretary - broadcasting Supriya Sahu as the member-secretary, was set up to ‘guide and supervise the process of e-auction and grant of licences to private parties‘ in Phase III.

    Meanwhile, the ministry has decided to commence work on the e-auctions and has called for tenders. The pre-qualification of the bidders is expected to be completed in about another two months, following which the companies that qualify will be allowed to participate in the e-auction for FM radio Phase III licences. The e-auction is expected to begin early next year.

    FM Phase III Policy will extend FM radio services to about 227 new cities with a total of 839 new FM radio channels in 294 cities. A total of 216 cities and towns will get private FM radio stations for the first time, out of the 302 identified by the government and split into four categories.

    In Phase III, 67 of the 86 cities and towns which already have private FM Radio channels will get additional channels. All cities with a population of 100,000 and above are entitled to get private FM radio channels in Phase III auctions.

    The committee was expected to finalise and seek approval for the Request for Proposal document for selection of agency for conducting the e-auction, review the auction framework, finalise the auction documentation, conduct and oversee open house sessions for stakeholders, and guide the agency selected for the e-auction.

    A separate Appellate Review Committee was also set up to scrutinize the short-listing of prospective bidders headed by the Additional Secretary and Financial Advisor in the I&B ministry. This committee will scrutinize various details including the net worth of prospective bidders and put them up on the ministry website, scrutinize bank guarantees and oversee the other work in that connection.

    Private FM Radio broadcasters in North East (NE) Region and Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) and Island territories will be required to pay half the rate of annual license fee for an initial period of three years from the date from which the annual license fee becomes payable and the permission period of fifteen years begins. The revised fee structure has also been made applicable for a period of three years, from the date of issuance of guidelines, to the existing operators in these states to enable them to effectively compete with the new operators.

    Apart from the fee relaxation, Prasar Bharati infrastructure would be made available at half the lease rentals for similar category cities in such areas. The limit on the ownership of channels, at the national level, allocated to an entity has been retained at 15 per cent. However, channels allotted in Jammu & Kashmir, North Eastern States and island territories will be allowed over and above the 15 per cent national limit to incentivise the bidding for channels in such areas.

    A total of 245 FM channels are currently operational in 87 cities, each with a population of over 300,000 or more.

    Meanwhile, All India Radio (AIR) is working on a plan to increase the coverage of its FM Radio channels from 37 to 90 per cent of the population, in a modernisation programme undertaken since 2011 and expected to be completed by 2016. AIR has already covered 99 per cent of the population with its analogue technology channels.

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    Rajiv Takru
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  • Govt working on ways to stop glamourisation of smoking in films and TV

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 28
    indiantelevision.com Team

    NEW DELHI: The Information and Broadcasting Ministry is actively working with the Health and Family Welfare Ministry to find ways to prevent glamourisation of smoking in cinema and television.

    Supriya Sahu, Director (Broadcasting) in the I&B Ministry said the Central Board of Film Certification officers were convinced that showing scenes of cinema in feature films could be prevented.

    She said, however, that there more instances of direct or indirect advertising of liquor brands than of cigarette brands.

    She expressed the hope that officials of the Health and Family Welfare Ministry would attend meetings of the Inter-Ministerial Committee set up by her Ministry to go into complaints from viewers about television programmes. She said her Ministry was presently monitoring 300 channels round the clock throughout the year.
     
    Sahu was speaking at a discussion which was part of a one-day National Level Workshop on Prohibition / Restrictions on glamourisation of tobacco usage in films/television organised by the Health Ministry in collaboration with the World Health Organisation and the Salaam Bombay Foundation.

    Dr Rakesh Kumar, Director in the Health Ministry, admitted that though it had brought in guidelines against showing scenes of smoking in cinema and TV and later amended them, there had been little implementation. Similarly, he agreed that there was greater need for interaction with the I&B Ministry.

    While admitting that films and TV influenced young children, he said there was need to consider ways of enforcing existing laws or making newer laws. He released ?draft guidelines on monitoring of tobacco usage scenes in films and TV?.

    There was general consensus among all speakers that if smoking scenes were extremely essential to the story of a film, then the filmmaker should voluntarily apply for an ?Adults Only? Certification.

    Dr Barbara Zolty of the WHO said the role of her organisation was limited to creating awareness of the governments after appropriate research to the problems that existed and it was up to the concerned departments to act upon these. She released a study done by WHO on ?Smoke-free movies: From evidence to action?. She also said that she was not in favour of draconian measures but expected filmmakers to get an ?A? certification if a film had to show smoking scenes.

    K Nagaraja who is a Regional Officer in the CBFC said a strong policy decision was needed at the level of the centre in this regard, even as he admitted that there was a provision in the CBFC Guidelines about not showing scenes glamorizing smoking. He said there was a time when only villains were shown having habits like smoking, but now it was normal to even show the central characters and women in such roles.

    Dr P C Gupta of the National Institute of Public Health who initiated the discussion said there were around one million deaths every year. Sadly, he said this was the ?only cause of death which is actually promoted?. There were around 275 million tobacco users in the country and many more were passive smokers forced to inhale tobacco smoke.

    Rekha Nigam, who has written the scripts of a large number of films in Bollywood, said instances of scenes where smoking was essential were very rare for the story of any film and these scenes were added more for glamour. Reacting to an audio-visual shown before the discussion of scenes from around ten films showing the characters smoking, she said there were other ways to show if someone was of loose character or to show glamour or to show rebellion by young people against norms set by their elders. "It is only lazy directors and lazy script writers who put in smoking scenes instead of finding other ways," she said.

    She also claimed that both the tobacco and liquor industries had powerful lobbies in the film industry. She said films generally did offer remedies to problems like smoking, but never went into the root of the problem.

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    Supriya Sahu
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