Prasar Bharati is India's largest public broadcasting agency. It is an autonomous body set up by an Act of Parliament and comprises Doordarshan Television Network and All India Radio, which were earlier media units of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. The Parliament of India passed the Prasar Bharati Act to grant this autonomy in 1990, but it was not enacted until 15 September 1997. Shashi Sekhar Vembati is the current chairperson of Prasar Bharati.
Shashi Sekhar Vembhati |
The Prasar Bharati Act stipulates general
superintendence, direction and management of affairs of the Corporation vests
in Prasar Bharati Board which may exercise all such powers and
do all such acts and things as may be exercised or done by the Corporation.
Prasar Bharati Board consists of:
· Chairman
· One
Executive Member
· One
Member (Finance)
· One
Member (Personnel)
· Six
Part-time Members
· Director-General
(Akashvani), ex officio
· Director-General
(Doordarshan), ex officio
· One
representative of the Union Ministry of Information and Broadcasting
(India), to be nominated by that Ministry and
· Two
representatives of the employees of the Corporation, of whom one shall be
elected by the engineering staff from amongst themselves and one shall be
elected by the other employee from amongst themselves.
The President of India appoints Chairman and the other Members, except the ex officio members, nominated member and the elected members.
Prasar Bharati Act
The Prasar Bharati Act provides for establishment of a
Broadcasting Corporation, to be known as Prasar Bharati, to define its
composition, functions and powers. The Act grants autonomy to All
India Radio and Doordarshan, which were previously under government
control. The Act received assent of President of India on 12 September
1990 after being unanimously passed by Parliament. It was finally
implemented in November 1997. By the Prasar Bharati Act, all property, assets,
debts, liabilities, payments of money due, all suits and legal proceedings
involving Akashvani (All India Radio) and Doordarshan were transferred to
Prasar Bharati.
Why was there a need for Broadcasting
Autonomy?
For over three decades beginning with Chanda
committee report in 1966 and continuing through the reports of
the Verghese Committee (Akash Bharti) in 1978 and the Joshi
Committee in 1985, recommendations for broadcasting reforms were put forth.
This need for autonomy was deeply felt soon after the emergeny period. As a
result, the Prasar Bharati Act (1990) was formed by the government. It was
the first instance of a government voluntarily bringing legislation to free the
media from its control which may set in motion a chain of events in the country
bringing in revolutionary changes in the field. Apart from safeguarding the
citizen’s right to be informed freely, truthfully and objectively, Prasar
Bharati was also required to pay attention to special fields such as education,
agriculture, development, women empowerment etc.
Objectives of Prasar Bharati Corporation
The major objectives of the Prasar Bharati Corporation
as laid out in the Prasar Bharati Act, 1990 are as follows:
· Upholding
the unity and integrity of the country and the values enshrined in the
Constitution.
· Safeguarding
the citizen’s right to be informed freely, truthfully and objectively on all
matters of public interest, national or international, and presenting a fair
and balanced flow of information including contrasting views without advocating
any opinion or ideology of its own.
· Paying
special attention to the fields of education and spread of literacy,
agriculture, rural development, environment, health and family welfare and
science and technology.
· Providing
adequate coverage to the diverse cultures and languages of the various regions
of the country by broadcasting appropriate programmes.
· Providing
adequate coverage to sports and games so as to encourage healthy competition
and the spirit of sportsmanship.
· Providing
appropriate programmes keeping in view the special needs of the youth.
· Informing
and stimulating the national consciousness in regard to the status and problems
of women and paying special attention to the upliftment of women.
· Promoting social
justice and combating exploitation, inequality and such evils
as untouchability and advancing the welfare of the weaker sections of
the society.
· Safeguarding
the rights of the working classes and advancing their welfare.
· Serving
the rural and weaker sections of the people and those residing in border
regions, backward or remote areas.
· Providing
suitable programmes keeping in view the special needs of the minorities and
tribal communities.
· Taking
special steps to protect the interests of children, the blind, the aged, the
handicapped and other vulnerable sections of the people.
· Promoting
national integration by broadcasting in a manner that facilitates communication
in the languages in India; and facilitating the distribution of regional
broadcasting services in every State in the languages of that State.
· Providing
comprehensive broadcast coverage through the choice of appropriate technology
and the best utilisation of the broadcast frequencies available and ensuring
high quality reception.
Chanda committee was formed in 1964, when Indira Gandhi was the I&B minister under the chairmanship of A.K. Chanda. The report was submitted in 1967. Their recommendations included separation of TV and radio units, which resulted in the separation of AIR and Doordarshan. It also recommended that programs related to national interest must be broadcasted on priority basis.
The Janta Government had appointed a Working Group on the autonomy of the Akashwani and Doordarshan in August 1977. The chairman of this committee was B.G. Verghese. The committee submitted its report on February 24, 1978. This committee’s main recommendation was “formation of Akash Bharti or the “National Broadcasting Trust”, both for the AIR and Doordarshan. The committee noted that the people want an independent corporation because, the executive, abetted by a captive parliament, shamelessly misused the Broadcasting during emergency and this must be prevented for all times.
This was a bold recommendation of this committee,
which wanted substantial “Constitutional Safeguards” for the recommended
body. But these recommendations were not even supported by Janta rulers.
The minister (LK Advani) commented: “The
committee has recommended the creation of an independent, constitutional
entity, parallel to the Judiciary on which the legislature has no control. No
we can not accept it”.
The result was that the report was rejected.
PC Joshi Committee 1982
Congress appointed PC Joshi Committee in 1982,
whose main term of reference was to prepare a software plan for
Doordarshan. But this group also emphasized on the absence of “Functional
Freedom” in Prasar Bharati. This committee said that the Ministry of
Information and Broadcasting should be reorganized and a separate board on the
lines of Railway Board should be created, in which only people with
professional experience should get entry.
So, slowly a consensus developed for a Television
Authority of India -as a public trust and under the control of the parliament
and officed with only experienced professionals.
Sam Pitroda Committee 2014
The Prasar Bharati
Expert Committee, headed by technocrat Sam Pitroda, submitted its report to the
Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. Its main recommendations involved a
need for greater autonomy. There were 11 expert groups under this committee:
1. Expert group on
Prasar Bharati- Government Relationship
2. Expert group
on technology
3. Expert group
on Business development
4. Expert group
on Finance
5. Expert group
on HR and organisation
6. Expert group
on programming and content
7. Expert group
on Archiving
8. Expert group
on Global Initiatives
9. Expert group
on presence on social and new emerging media
10.Expert group on
Regulatory mechanism
11.Expert group on a comparative analysis of public service broadcasters
The expert group working for developing a viable model for public service broadcasting in the Indian context included Prof. Vartika Nanda, Head of Department of Journalism, LSR among notable members.
Recommendations:
- Amend the Prasar Bharati Act 1990 to give effective freedom to the Prasar Bharati with administrative and financial powers
- To give power to Prasar Bharati to frame rules and regulations and hire manpower without going to the government for approval. In other words, Prasar Bharati’s vision must be to become a “genuine public broadcaster” rather than a “government broadcaster”
- The public broadcaster should monetize all available assets to enhance funding.
- Make Direct-To-Home (DTH) signals the primary mode of transmitting content for Doordarshan.
- To set up Prasar Bharati Connect (PBC), as the third arm of PSB, apart from Doordarshan and AIR.
- Creation of dedicated, multi- platform channels for dissemination of Prasar Bharati archival products.
PRASAR BHARATI OFFICIAL WEBSITE: http://prasarbharati.gov.in/default.aspx
-Compiled by Nimisha Bansal
2 comments:
Excellent article. Thanks for sharing that with us.
Women Empowerment in India
Prof. Prem raj Pushpakaran writes -- 2023 marks the 100 years of India's radio broadcast and let us celebrate the occasion!!!
https://worldarchitecture.org/profiles/gfhvm/prof-prem-raj-pushpakaran-profile-page.html
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