| Representatives
of various news channels contacted by Indiantelevision.com said that they
had already conveyed their strong opposition to the Code on Friday and had hoped
the Information and Broadcasting ministry would not put the Code on its website
until it had heard their objections. However, since the ministry had given time
till 5 August for the channels to react, a joint note would be sent to the ministry
by the newscasters. Meanwhile, the broadcasters said that as both I&B
minister Priyaranjan Dasmunsi and secretary Asha Swaroop would be present at the
meet orgnised by FICCI, it would be a good opportunity to voice their grievance.
Commenting
on the Content Code put up on the I&B website, IBN 7 managing editor Ashutosh
said, "We said in the meeting yesterday that we do not feel there is any
need for a regulator. We are sticking to this. There is no need to talk of the
contents of the regulatory bill, as that would arise if we had prima facie
agreed that there is any need for a regulator.
We shall give our views and in a democratic set up, it is for the government to
decide what it would do. If and when it decides to ignore the comments of the
industry, we shall see what to do." News
channels felt that the Code would impeach on the media's freedom of expression.
Said Times Now editor-in-chief Arnab Goswami, "Journalism thrives on independence
of views, perspective and right of interpretation. Many parts of the Code go against
that. Indian TV and print media are mature enough to regulate itself. Whether
one would fight a legal battle on grounds of the Code violating against our freedom
of speech is speculative and one cannot go into that now." A
senior source in India TV told Indiantelevision.com that the ministry appeared
to be in a hurry to gag the electronic media and said the aim could be to help
the public broadcaster which was struggling to keep its head above water.
The source said that sting operations were never banned in any country and
were seen as helping the law enforcing agencies. Clearly, the curbs were aimed
at forcing channels to stop sting operations. In any case, he said the
channels were capable of self-regulation and the Code, therefore, should only
have provided for this. Janmat
editor and CEO Sudhir Chaudhary agreed that there were several grey areas in the
Content Code. "For the news channels, this is censorship by the backdoor.
These rules look good only on paper, but will be difficult to implement uniformly
across all the channels. Taking permission from various authorities to broadcast
a show will be unnecessarily tedious as we are in a medium which works on quick
reactions. " |