Tag: India TV

  • India TV in branding exercise

    MUMBAI: As digitisation becomes a reality in India, news channels have realised that a branding exercise is the need of the hour in order to catch the eye of the consumers. The latest to invest in this practice is Hindi news channel India TV which will be launching its first trade campaign named ‘Bharat se India Tak‘.

    The campaign, which will kick off next week, is conceptualised by Saints and Warriors with the objective of communicating its ability as a channel to “crossover to the right audiences across the length and breadth of the nation, audiences that are worthy target groups for a wide array of national & international brands trying to reach out to the vast and rapidly evolving Indian market.”
    The ‘Bharat se India Tak‘ will run for a month.

    India TV is trying to correct the wrong perception about its brand values. “One of the issues that came up in the conversations within the channel was that the actual reality of the audiences that view India TV is very different from the perception that people
     have. You keep hearing about the perceptions and it is troublesome as it is not what the actual audience measures tell you. These measures tell you that the channel has urban, semi urban and rural audiences. It has in fact very strong audiences in Delhi and Mumbai,” India TV strategist Paritosh Joshi told Indiantelevision.com.

    The campaign draws from the fact that India and Bharat are two words which are usually used to emphasise the rural-urban divide in the country. While India cues genteel, urbane and upwardly mobile, Bharat connotes the rustic and perhaps backward hinterland. Of course, reality is scarcely that simple and beneath the superficial contrasts, there are strong linkages that bind the two together. Through this campaign India TV aims to reinforce that it is one such common denominator.

    The campaign includes digital and print initiatives with trade websites and publications respectively. The first phase of the campaign will go on for a month, after which it will scale up. For now the channel intends to focus on B2B branding, but will also look at a B2C campaign in the long run.

    Recently, Zee News also drove a social media campaign promoting its new philosophy ‘Jitegi Aapki Soch‘. According to Joshi, this trend of news channel investing in branding is here to stay as the environment gets increasingly digitised. “In a digitised India, consumers will have ample choice and perception will matter. I believe a battle of brands will take place in every category as you have to be out there for the consumer to want you. News channels are no different,” he says.

  • Paritosh Joshi joins India TV as strategist

    MUMBAI: News broadcaster India TV has appointed Paritosh Joshi as strategist and will be responsible for its revenue and business development.

    Joshi‘s earlier stint was as CEO of Star CJ Network India, a joint venture between Star Group and CJ O Shopping of South Korea. He resigned from the post in April 2012.

    In his new role, Joshi will be primarily responsible for optimising and leading the revenue function of India TV‘s existing businesses. He will also look at the company‘s business development for future ventures.

    Apart from working with the management at the strategic level, as a mentor Joshi will also actively connect and engage India TV‘s business teams including sales, new media and brand.

    India TV MD and CEO Ritu Dhawan said, “Immensely experienced Paritosh will be a tremendous resource in formulating the strategy for our new, ready to roll business plans. While we look forward to his contribution in taking Independent News service to the next level, we feel delighted in welcoming Paritosh on the team. With his outstanding record, we are confident that he will be making most significant contributions in increasing our lead over competition as the most profitable media company.”

    Joshi said, “I have had the pleasure of knowing Mr. Rajat Sharma as a senior industry colleague and fellow IBF Board member for the last six years and we have had many lively conversations on the television business. It is from such a conversation earlier this year that the idea of this engagement began. With a solid revenue engine already in place supported by a talented sales team, India TV is poised for even bigger achievements. It is a privilege to be invited to participate in this exciting journey and I look forward to a stimulating, inspiring assignment.”

    Joshi has 27 years corporate experience. He has worked in sectors like FMCG ( P&G, ITC , the Maharaja Organisation) and media (Business Standard and STAR, Advertising). He has also worked briefly at Lintas, Commodity Futures and Industrial Perfumery at Quest International.

  • Winds of change in India’s TV ratings land

    Winds of change in India’s TV ratings land

    MUMBAI: The relentless attack against TAM Media, India’s sole television ratings system, is coming from all sides.

    First NDTV’s lawsuit in New York accusing TAM of knowingly allowing manipulation of viewership data in favour of channels that are willing to provide bribes to its officials. Next the Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF) pressing for the existence of Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC). And then the Prasar Bharati board approval to explore legal options against TAM in consultation with the Information and Broadcasting ministry.

    TAM’s final support from advertising and media agencies is also cracking. The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and the Indian Society of Advertisers (ISA) have expressed concern over the issue and are meeting TAM officials on 16 August.
    “We (ISA and AAAI) will be taking a collective view on this issue. We have scheduled a meeting with TAM later this week. I have no independent opinion that I can share with you at this stage,” says GroupM South Asia CEO Vikram Sakhuja.

    So is there something rotten in the ratings agency that influences advertising expenditure of around Rs 140 billion on Indian television networks a year?

    The truth is that parachuting out of TAM is no easy option. There is no surviving ratings agency and setting up operations in quick time to represent India’s vast and diverse socio-economic structure can’t happen in any hurry. It has, after all, taken TAM 14 years of hard experience in the Indian market to set up a ratings system that may have become inadequate in coverage now (broadcasters would say inaccurate too) but has largely captured the industry needs over so many years.

    BARC and the power tussle

    BARC, the option that broadcasters have been toying with for so long, is yet to gather wings. It is in a way stuck between a power tussle between the broadcasters and the agencies. Even after agreeing this March on a shareholding structure with broadcasters having a majority of 60 per cent equity and the AAAI and ISA holding the balance 40 per cent, it has failed to get off the ground.

    “We (IBF) are keen to set BARC in motion. But AAAI and ISA have been responsible for slowing down the progress,” says IBF
    president and Star India CEO Uday Shankar.

    That direct attack has not gone down well with the agencies. “The ball is in the IBF court and the draft document (incorporating memorandum and articles of association) has been sent to them a while back,” states AAAI president and Leo Burnett chairman and CEO Indian subcontinent.

    But why will the media agencies be interested in delaying the existence of BARC?

    “Maybe, the system is working for them. Only one-third of the country is measured by TAM and for that they are getting paid (by the broadcasters) for the whole of India. Television advertising is, thus, cheaply priced and they are benefitting from it,” says the chief executive of a leading broadcaster on condition of anonymity.
    AAAI president and Leo Burnett chairman and CEO of India subcontinent Arvind Sharma does not agree that the agencies do not want a new ratings system as the current structure helps them drive down prices. “The belief that the only purpose is buying cheap is not right. Clients have a very different agenda and are interested in reaching out to their target audiences. In a free market, pricing will definitely be an issue but not the only one that matters,” he says.

    The root of the matter is that broadcasters, yielding to the muscle power of the media agencies who have consolidated over the years to gain size, want to strike a balance that will enable them to get better pricing for their content as costs have spiraled over the years. They have been unable to do that for so many years but a new-found unity due to economic compulsions has provided them with sufficient strength to push for BARC.

    Shankar, a newsman throughout his work life till Rupert Murdoch made him the CEO of his highly successful media empire in India, was quick to sense this changing pulse. Sharing a great relationship with the son of Subhash Chandra and Zee Entertainment Enterprises chief Punit Goenka, he played a main role in uniting the broadcasters in this fight.

    The benefit of that unity: broadcasters could get majority stake in BARC and even went to the extent of excluding ISA.

    “They (IBF) first said why have ISA as a part of it (BARC). That came as a stumbling block. But we are cooperating with them and are not resisting anything that will genuinely protect the interests of our clients and the industry as a whole,” says the head of a leading media agency who did not want his name to be revealed.

    When BARC was first mooted in March 2008, the ISA was kept out of the shareholding structure. The IBF held 60 per cent IBF and the remaining 40 per cent was with AAAI.

    “In the beginning, an ISA representative said they want 50 per cent share. Then it watered down to one-third of stake with each body and they even said that they would not pay for their equity holding. We were appalled by the suggestion as it would have given the two of them a combined share of two-third in the entity. We found that unacceptable and said that if they made such demands, ISA could be kept out as the interests of these two bodies are aligned and they want to buy advertising cheap. Obviously, we didn’t want IBF to be outvoted. Since the ratings system is primarily for a broadcast market and there is need for complete independence of data, we didn’t want any change in the construct of the shareholding,” says Shankar.

    How the power equation changed

    So why did the agencies bend and come down to supporting BARC?

    “The government has stepped in and that has changed the power equation,” says the head of a broadcasting company.

    The situation has, indeed, changed. When Zee raised its voice against TAM in late 2001, alleging leakage and manipulation of data, it appeared like a lone wolf wailing in the dark. Few came in support and TAM CEO LV Krishnan then countered that the channel did not raise the credibility issue when it was enjoying higher TRPs (television rating points). “Was it because some other channels have an edge today,” he had stated.

    Even when Doordarshan clamoured for a wider representation of measurement data that would be able to capture its kind of mass audiences, it did not get support. Private broadcasters were then busy eating into the audiences of the pubcaster and expanding their own networks at a time when cable and satellite television started penetrating wide and deep.

    NDTV’s allegations have, perhaps, caught more attention as the broadcaster has not just moved the court but also filed it in New York. It also cited an unidentified “whistleblower” who seemed to have said that he “accepted bribes from TV channels and in turn paid bribes to TAM officials and to some of the people who have allowed TAM to install peoplemeters at their homes”.

    Growth in Tier II and III towns demand expanded coverage

    The embarrassment has come at a time when TAM is under pressure to expand its coverage to smaller cities and get into more demographic sampling. India’s growth is coming from tier II and III towns, forcing companies to advertise and market in these areas. Regional television channels and media are, as a result, fostering faster growth.

    “In the last 3-4 years, hinterland India is where growth is taking place. To make smart choices, media agencies need data. There should be urgency in moving forward to get a new measurement system in place that will be more representative of the country,” avers Sharma.

    Niche channels, which have grown in numbers over the years, are also feeling the heat and are wanting a ratings system that would measure upscale audiences in greater intensity. “We would like a more healthy mix of sampling homes,” says the head of a niche channel.

    News broadcasters are the biggest victims of this inadequate representation and, saddled with exorbitant carriage costs and loss-making businesses, are also the most vociferous. They blame TAM and a weekly ratings reporting system for putting their content under constant evaluation and pressure, leading to a larger degree of commodification of news across networks.

    “There is a general sense of dissatisfaction with the current ratings system. This is what is throwing the whole pattern out of gear. There is anarchy in data and we can notice the skews in time spends and viewership trends between analogue and digital homes. BARC will look for a more equitable basis of data representation where there is more consistency,” says Sunil Lulla, MD and CEO of Times Television Network, the holding company that runs a clutch of channels including Times Now, ET Now, Movies Now and Zoom.

    The time has, indeed, come for the TV ratings system to narrow the gap in representation between bigger and smaller towns and measure more equitably across the demographics and socio-economic strata. BARC has set a target of reaching out to 30,000 homes, much higher than TAM’s current panel size of 8150 peoplemeters with sample size of 36,000 respondents across 162 cities and towns.

    TAM‘s task at hand

    For TAM to appease the broadcasters in particular, it will have to first expand into more cities and add peoplemeters. It is that basic. But to achieve that, it needs funding support from the industry which has been in scarce flow so far.

    The ratings measurement agency has set itself a target of the coverage extending to over 225 towns with 10,000 peoplemeters and 45,000 sample size (respondents). TAM also aims to expand into the less than Class 1 India markets. Since 2009, it has been covering Maharashtra in the ‘Less than Class I’ geographic stratum. To this stratum, it is now adding seven more states: Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan and UP. These will be reported as individual states except for Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh which will, as usual, be reported together as PHCHP. TAM had announced the plan of going rural in July 2012. This will add up another 1110 sample homes.

    With this expansion, TAM believes it will practically complete covering the entire urban stratum for the Hindi Speaking Market (HSM) group.

    BARC’s ambition is much higher. An initial requirement of 30,000 peoplemeters would require an investment of around Rs 6.5 billion. For anybody to achieve that, TAM would need the industry to drum up investment.

    Situation demands therapy

    The situation demands therapy. Publicis India CEO Nakul Chopra believes there is a lot of scope for improvement. “There are issues on the sample size, methodology and industry-wide acceptance. From that perspective, the time has come for treatment. Let us forget the micro issues like corruption, integrity and veracity of data, though it is a matter of grave concern as there is a lot of time and energy agencies spend on strategising. The truth is that the macro situation demands the existence of a watchdog body like BARC,” he says.

    Multi Screen Media president network sales, licensing & telephony Rohit Gupta has suggested some immediate measures that need to be taken. “Right now it is TAM’s word against the world’s. We should have an audit process mandated by the three bodies (IBF, AAAI and ISA) which would clear a lot of smog. Also, BARC should get activated soon. Clients should now wake up and put pressure on agencies.”

    The AAAI had a meeting with the IBF last week but no details have been shared yet. “I can’t give any details now. Wait for the announcement soon,” says Sharma.

    The NDTV lawsuit has acted as a stimulus. “We should approach the issue with a sense of urgency. All of us want right and segmented data so that we make the right buying decisions. After laying out the framework and working out the costs, we will have to nail down the design and the vendor. The only way a new currency can be produced is by working together. Truth serves us best. Partial truth only lands all of us in an unhappy place,” says an expansive Sharma.

    Lulla sums up the mood. “We need to wake up and smell the coffee,” he says.

  • Yang Communications bags India TV’s creative mandate

    Yang Communications bags India TV’s creative mandate

    MUMBAI: India TV has awarded its creative mandate to Saints & Warriors‘ agency Yang Communications.

    The Hindi news channel had called for a pitch that lasted a couple of rounds with the participating agencies demonstrating their knowledge of the space.

    Yang managing partner Sanjay Sharma said, “We are very excited about the prospect of partnering India TV in the hyper competitive space of Hindi news. This brand has been the fastest growing and the most consistent one among all other news channels. During the pitch process, we were able to demonstrate some innovative communication solutions which resonated with the client.”

    Yang creative director Anil Verma added, “The creative challenge is of creating and preserving a rightful stature for a leader.”

    India TV MD and CEO Ritu Dhawan said, “We are confident of having found a right partner in Yang while we further consolidate & cement India TV‘s leadership position in the minds of advertisers & viewers alike and ready ourselves for bigger stakes in the broadcast media space.”

  • India TV appoints Gulab Makhija as CFO

    India TV appoints Gulab Makhija as CFO

    MUMBAI: India TV has poached three senior executives from TV Today Network and made a few other key appointments.

    The Rajat Sharma-promoted company has appointed Gulab Makhija as its chief financial officer. He will be responsible for financial management and control systems in the company’s growth plan.

    Prior to joining India TV, Makhija was CFO at TV Today Network where he was instrumental in cost optimisation across the network.

    Meanwhile, as a part of its growth strategy, India TV has also announced other key appointments.

    Rohit Lal has been appointed as VP Programming. Lal comes with experience of programming at Zee, IBN and Star networks.

    Prashant Sharda, who was with Nokia, has joined as VP Digital Media to look after mobile, 3G, and streaming and India TV’s website, while working towards digital convergence for the company.

    Shubhra Manasi comes from TV Today and will look after Strategic Planning and Research functions for the company as DGM.

    Pradeep Khatri has joined as chief manager- marketing. He also comes from TV Today and will be responsible for marketing communication, sales support & sponsorship marketing functions.

    India TV MD and CEO Ritu Dhawan said, “We are happy to induct new team leaders and expect that their proven track records will add strength to the existing strong team. We together look forward to further consolidate our leadership position in the Hindi news genre and set new benchmarks in the domain.”

    Makhija added, “I look forward to a great opportunity and exciting times with India TV, a company that is all set to take the leap to the next level of success.”

  • ‘A generational shift is happening in the TV news space’ : BAG Films and Media CMD Anurradha Prasad

    ‘A generational shift is happening in the TV news space’ : BAG Films and Media CMD Anurradha Prasad

     

    BAG Films and Media founder-promoter Anurradha Prasad has put up a mighty fight. Not many would have dared take her seat a year back as she had to fend for her two newly-launched channels amid an epic global economic downturn.

     

    News24 was fighting for space in a crowded Hindi news TV market. The top tier – Aaj Tak, India TV, Star News and Zee TV – had settled. Just down below were IBN7 and NDTV India, both big brands and threatening to pace up.

     

    Prasad promised hard news, a gap that wasn‘t being serviced too well. But down the road she realised that news consumption was changing. Riding the cyclic wave was important. So she changed gears without compromising the basic ethics of journalism. “We have to bring in the interesting element. India is a youth population. We have to show news that appeals to them,” she says.

     

    News24‘s market share improved, inching close to seven per cent. E24, the Bollywood news channel, was also gaining currency. While the slowdown allowed her to trim costs, revenues also started looking up. The net result: bringing down the broadcasting business‘ operating loss to Rs 122.36 million during the first nine months of FY‘10.

     

    The struggle, though, is far from over. The broadcasting business is still bleeding while the TV content production, which used to rake in revenues of around Rs 600 million, is almost blank.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com‘s Sibabrata Das & Gaurav Laghate, Prasad says the broadcasting business will operationally break even this fiscal and the focus will be to revive the content production business.

     

    Excerpts:
     

     
    Bag Films recently raised $17.4 million. Is the funding complete with that or you will need more capital?

    We have raised Rs 804.5 million ($17.4 million) through a GDR issue to fund our existing broadcasting business. The board had taken an approval to raise $30 million over two years. We will need new capital when we decide to launch two more channels.

     
     
    But aren‘t the two existing channels bleeding while the TV content production business is almost a blank?

    Yes, we are still posting losses, but they are much less than the earlier fiscal. The two channels will be operationally breaking even this fiscal. We will be raising our ad rates by at least 20 per cent while we have brought down the costs.
     

     
    Won‘t there be a shortfall even then as your cash burn rate is about Rs 700 million?

    For News24, the cash burn is around Rs 600 million, while our revenue at this level is Rs 400-450 million. We are starting with a hike in ad rates in the first quarter of the fiscal, but expect to post more growth during the course of the year. We will also be tapping more clients. As for E24, we are already very close to being in a break even state.
     

     
    When you announced your broadcast plans, you said you needed a funding of Rs 4 billion. How much have you completed so far?

    We had raised Rs 2.4 billion from India Bulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut, High Growth Distributors and Fidelity. Add to this the Rs 804.5 million we have just raised. There is still a shortfall but the original plan included the launch of four channels. We have put the launch of two channels on hold.
     

     
    Recession hit the industry just as you made an entry into the broadcasting space. Were your plans upset in a major way?

    We deferred the launch of our two channels. Our revenue projections also went for a toss. But the slowdown actually acted as a blessing in disguise. We could rationalise our costs very early into our expansion into the TV broadcasting space. We transferred our E24 operations from Mumbai to Delhi. This was a bold step as we had to take the risk of running a Bollywood news channel from Delhi, but we succeeded. We also initiated multitasking at the junior level.
     

     
    ‘The two channels will be operationally breaking even this fiscal. We will be raising our ad rates by at least 20% while we have brought down the costs by 30% on a monthly basis‘
     
     

    Did this also mean trimming manpower?

    Our peak staff strength came down from 900 to 650 people. But I did not make any compromise on the editorial and we did not ask anyone to leave. By restructuring operations, we brought down our costs by 30 per cent on a monthly basis. And now with the market improving, we see ourselves ready for growth.
     

     
    News24 has managed to improve its market share in the Hindi news channel space to around 7 per cent. Just before launch, you had said that you would focus on serious news. Have you had to dilute from your original position to gain market share?

    We have had to change along with the tastes of our viewers. So we brought in the “interesting” factor in news without compromising on our journalistic ethics. For example, we aired a story on prostitutes dancing on a cremation ground in Varanasi. We wouldn‘t have shown this two years back. Visually, it was a great story. We must remember that India has a dominant youth population and they consume news so differently. And why blame them? It is a twitter age.
     
     

    So is news getting redefined?

    Let‘s face it. A generational shift is happening in the TV news space. And there are cyclic waves of viewing preferences. After the Mumbai terror attack, all channels started ‘Pakistan bashing‘ while the ‘bhoot-pret‘ (ghosts and demons) element came down. And audiences loved that.

     

    Indians love experimentation in every aspect. I also believe that though English has become the link language, Indians typically think in Hindi. Which is why some of the English news channels are also changing.
     
     

    In such a cluttered Hindi TV news market, how will News24 wing its way up?

    Our focus this year will be on distribution. We feel we have a strong chance of going up the ratings ladder among the second tier of Hindi news channels once this is taken care of. I firmly believe that chaos leads to creation.

     

    We see a high growth and revenue potential for News24 as there are still over 200 advertisers to tap. And the effective rate of advertising is still the lowest in the broadcasting sector. We believe the market will expand to accommodate more players.

     

    Also, the sporting events like Commonwealth Games, T20 World Cup and ODI World Cup will generate a lot of excitement, which will help the news channels.
     
     

    Do you have plans to launch your channels in international markets?

    We have international expansion plans for our broadcasting business. We plan to launch both the channels in the Middle East by the first quarter of this fiscal.

     

    We already give the feed of E24 to DirecTV in USA for two hours daily.

     
     
    How do you plan to revive your TV content production business that was raking in about Rs 600 million?

    Since our broadcasting business is under control, we will bring back our focus on the TV content business. We understand that side of the business very well. We will make soaps as they are the staple diet of all Hindi general entertainment channels. Non-fiction content is expensive and the RoI (return on investments) is not good; broadcasters are realising this. 

     

     
    On the FM radio front, will you bid for phase III once the government comes out with a policy for it?

    We have 10 operational radio stations at this stage. We will take a call on bidding for more stations once there is clarity on regulation. There are still question marks on royalty and permission of news on radio. Since we are already in TV news, we believe permission of news on radio will give us a definite push and advantage.

     
     
    Are we going to see Bag Films being active on the movie production front this fiscal?

    We will wait for further price corrections. Recent movies like LSD (Love, Sex aur Dhoka) are good business models.

  • India TV appoints Manoj Sharma as group biz head; Dhawan gets additional CEO responsibility

    India TV appoints Manoj Sharma as group biz head; Dhawan gets additional CEO responsibility

    MUMBAI: Rajat Sharma-promoted India TV has appointed Manoj Sharma as group business head. The company, which has plans for launching more channels, said that this appointment is in line with its “expansion plans”.

    Sharma will oversee the business expansion of all group companies including Independent News, India TV Interactive, Independent Media, Studio Brahma and India TV Mission.

    Sharma comes with over 20 years of experience, which includes working with the India Today group for 18 years.

    Meanwhile, Ritu Dhawan, who is MD of the company, has been given the additional responsibility of chief executive officer. Executive director RK Arora will take up the additional responsibility of chief financial officer.

    “We will be restructuring the organisation and making some senior level appointments in the coming weeks,” the company said in a release.

  • India TV returns to NBA fold after three-month estrangement

    India TV returns to NBA fold after three-month estrangement

    NEW DELHI: India TV has returned to the News Broadcasters Association after three months of estrangement over the decision of the NBA Authority taking suo motu action on the telecast of a report relating to an interview by a Pakistani researcher to Reuters after the terrorist attacks in Mumbai on 26 November last year.

    Following the channel’s return to the NBA, its founder-chairman Rajat Sharma will rejoin as a member of the NBA Board. The channel’s managing editor Vinod Kapri, who had tendered his resignation, returns as a member of the NBA Authority.

    It is understood that though the channel was forced to pay a penalty of Rs 100,000 and run an apology scroll, India TV which had quit NBA on 19 April decided to sink differences after some members of the NBA Board – themselves broadcasters – were sympathetic and admitted the guidelines of the Board had not been followed.

    NBA sources told indiantelevision.com that any viewer can complain to the respective TV channel directly about any report. The matter goes to the NBA Authority headed by Justice JS Verma only after the channel has not been able to satisfy the complainant within one week.

    India TV had run a late night report in Hindi about an interview given in English to Reuters by Barhana Ali who is a researcher with the American CIA about the terrorist attack. Ali had subsequently complained to the channel that the interview had been in English to Reuters and not to the channel, and that she had been erroneously described as a CIA spy.

    The channel had subsequently run a story clarifying the points made by Ali, and she was satisfied. The NBA Board had been duly informed and decided to treat the matter as closed.

    However, the 9-member NBA Authority – set up by the NBA Board – decided suo motu to take up the case and is understood to have taken a decision against the channel in a hearing which reportedly did not have the quorum as required under the guidelines.

    India TV is understood to have taken the decision to return in the larger interest of unity among news channels.

  • I&B gives India TV time till 1 December to reply to notice

    I&B gives India TV time till 1 December to reply to notice

    MUMBAI / NEW DELHI: The ministry of information and broadcasting (MIB) has issued a notice to India TV for airing telephonic conversation with two terrorists holed up in Nariman House and The Oberoi Hotel.

    Confirming the development to Indiantelevision.com, a senior I&B official said India TV was given time till 1 December to reply to the notice. The ministry has demanded an explanation from the channel for affording a “platform to terrorists to espouse their cause” and will consider taking “stringent action” after that.

    Justifying India TV’s stance, COO Rohit Bansal said: “We will be sending a comprehensive reply to the ministry.”
    He said that the telephonic conversations helped security agencies give compelling answers on their accent and provide first-hand confirmation to the world that they had come from Pakistan and not from Hyderabad in the Deccan.

    “India TV partnered with the help of security agencies and helped generate specific and information that one terrorist, Shadullah, was using the mobile phone of a Swedish lady, Lisa Ringner, kept hostage in Room No.1856 at The Oberoi. The other terrorist Imran Babar, holed up in Nariman House, was using the phone belonging to another hostage, Holtzberg Gaverlein. India TV repeatedly asked these terrorists to surrender, as they were surrounded by security agencies and appealed to them to release the hostages.”

    Defending India TV’s position, Bansal further said: “All across the globe, video/audio messages of Osama Bin Laden and interviews of self-styled commanders of Hizbul Mujahideen and Lashker-e-Taiba have been broadcast by the media. These stories have exposed the perpetrators of terror. The entire objective of India TV was similar. We engaged the two terrorists in on-air conversations and secured vital information about their numbers, intentions and their foreign origin.”

  • India TV complains to MIB on `India News’

    India TV complains to MIB on `India News’

    MUMBAI: India TV has filed a complaint in the ministry of information and broadcasting (MIB) saying its “fair name and goodwill” were being compromised because of regulatory permission given to Information TV to run a 24-hour Hindi news channel by the name of ‘India News’.

    In a letter to information and broadcasting minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunshi, India TV chairman and editor-in-chief Rajat Sharma has expressed shock at continued references to India News as India TV.

    Sharma in his letter has cited several instances including the letter written by National Commission for Protection of Child Rights member Sandhya Bajaj, which is being widely circulated in the press, claiming that a pornographic MMS purportedly of Arushi Talwar, was aired on India TV when in fact, it was aired on India News. Sharma maintained that India TV has nothing at all to do with such an objectionable video.

    India TV said in a statement that Bajaj too is being apprised of her erroneous information, but that the damage can’t be undone, because by now many sections of the press have associated the pornographic MMS with India TV instead of India News.

    India TV has also conveyed one case in point where The Times of India of 10 June on page three put the erroneous and unjust reference to India TV instead of `India News’.

    In an identical letter to Women and Child Development minister Renuka Chaudhary, Sharma pointed out that in a talk show on the Arushi case aired by NDTV, members of the audience and experts invited by NDTV managing editor Barkha Dutt, referred to India TV as the purported broadcaster of the pornographic MMS instead of India News, and it was left to Deepak Chaurasia, Senior Editor, Aaj Tak to clarify.

    “Such acts of confusion have emanated out of the regulatory decision to allocate a similar sounding name to the channel owned by Information TV,” said Sharma.

    “India TV is exercising every option to protect its name. Our senior counsel Abhishek Manu Singhvi has suggested seven alternate names to the court and it has directed Information TV and India News to carry detailed disclaimers until the disposal of the case,” an India TV statement said.

    Sharma pointed out that on 29 April even MIB issued an important letter to India TV, but referred to it as India News. The MIB had to issue a corrigendum on 30 April for the same.

    A similar reference to India News when the intent was to refer to India TV was made by the Delhi High Court.