• Pak channels go off air during crackdown on protesters

    MUMBAI: The Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) just proved that it means what it says.

  • ARY News asked to pay INR 1.58 cr to Geo TV as compensation

    MUMBAI: A legal rift raging between two big media groups in Pakistan -- ARY News and Geo TV -- settled recently in a

  • Zindagi expands programming duration; to launch HD, bi-lingual feed

    MUMBAI: Zee Le Zindagi.

  • Kurnool LCO's office sealed, 3 others' being investigated: MIB on Peace TV

    NEW DELHI: While denying that the Information and Broadcasting Ministry had asked the Home Ministry to help in keepin

  • Peace TV Saga: 24 TV channels identified unfit for telecast in 2015 by India

    NEW DELHI: As some South Asian countries scramble to plug loopholes to stop re-transmission of unlicensed TV channels

  • Fourteen TV channels from Pakistan figure in list of 24 illegal channels

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 05, 2012
    indiantelevision.com Team

    NEW DELHI: Fourteen television channels from Pakistan figure in a list of 24 channels which security agencies have identified as ?not conducive to the security environment in the country?.

    The agencies have said the content of some of these channels poses a potential security hazard.

    The Pakistani channels are PTV, PTV Home, PTV World, Geo TV, Dawn, Express, Waqat, Q TV, Madni TV, Noor TV, Hadi TV, Aaj, Filmax and STV.

    Out of the other ten, there are two from Nepal (one identified as Nepal, and the other as Kantipur), and one channel each from Bangladesh (NTV Bangladesh), Maldives (TV Maldives), Bhutan (Bhutan Broadcasting Service), and there is a United Kingdom-based channel, Ahmedia Channel.

    Other channels from Arab countries are Peace TV from Dubai, and Saudi TV. The origin of ARY TV and XYZ TV has not been mentioned.

    Interestingly, Al Jazeera News which had figured in a list disclosed in Parliament early this year does not figure in the latest list issued by the Information and Broadcasting Ministry.

    While 16 states and five union territories have set up monitoring committees, these have also been set up in 274 districts.

    The ministry has proposed certain amendments in the Cable TV Networks (Regulation) Act 1995 to deal with carriage of illegal channels and to make their transmission a cognizable offence. The Standing Committee on Information Technology has already submitted its report on this bill to the Parliament.

    Image
Subscribe to