BBC Worldwide India: Women team makes fiction push
MUMBAI: Keeping the viewers glued to their television screens on prime time to cheer for their favourite Jhalak star
NEW DELHI: Television channels are proposed to be brought under the ambit of the Indecent Representation of Women (Prohibition) Act 1986.
The act currently does not cover electronic media. The act as it currently stands prohibits indecent representation of women through advertisements or in publications, writings or paintings and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto.
Officials in the Women and Child Development Ministry, who did not want to be identified, told indiantelevision.com that the ministry is also proposing to enhance the penal provisions in the act.
The officials clarified that the move to amend the act had nothing to do with the recent incident of gang-rape in New Delhi and the resultant death of the victim.
The officials said the proposed amendments were approved by the Cabinet much earlier for being moved in Parliament as an amendment to the act.
NEW DELHI: The government does not consider it necessary to change the rules relating to content in the Programme and Advertising Codes prescribed under the Cable Television Networks (Regulations) Act 1995. It feels the provisions in the codes are adequate.
Information and Broadcasting Ministry sources told indiantelevision.com that the regulations were being implemented by the self-regulatory bodies under the Indian Broadcasting Foundation and the News Broadcasters Association.
However, the sources made it clear that the self-regulation mechanism put in place by the broadcasters ?does not replace the existing regulatory function of the fovernment arising out of the 1995 Act and rules framed thereunder?.
The Inter-Ministerial Committee of the I and B Ministry continues to look into violations of the Code reported to the Ministry, and also refers some of these complaints to the self-regulatory bodies: News Broadcasting Standards Authority headed by Justice J S Verma and the Broadcast Content Complaints Council headed by Justice A P Shah.
The committee presently has representatives from the I&B, Women and Child Development, Consumer Affairs, Home, Defence, External Affairs, Law, and Health and Family Welfare Ministries and the Advertising Standards Council of India.
In addition, the Ministry has set up 21 state-level monitoring committees including union territories and 274 district-level monitoring committees across the country.
The government had set up a committee in October 2005 which also had members from the civil society to recommend changes in the content, and this committee gave its report in March 2008.
However, broadcasters had rejected the report and the NBA was formed to set up its own regulatory mechanism, followed thereafter by the IBF establishing the BCCC.
Thereafter, the sources said, the government decided to give self-regulation a chance while insisting that it will step in whenever needed.
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