Tag: ministry directive

  • MSO registrations remain slow even as DAS deadlines approach

    MSO registrations remain slow even as DAS deadlines approach

    NEW DELHI: The registration of multi-system operators (MSOs) remained slow with 71 provisional clearances in December 2016 and up to 4 January 2017 taking the total to 1130 despite the fact that less than a month is left for Phase III analogue switch-off and two months before the final phase of digital addressable system DAS deadline gets over.

    The number of permanent MSOs (with 10-year licences) remained static at 229, while the number of cancellations remained at 44 as intimated on 30 November 2016. Of the 71 entrants, 21 were registered in the first four days of January 2017.

    The total number of MSOs is miniscule when compared to the information and broadcasting ministry’s own estimate that there are an estimated 6000 MSOs in the country. A ministry official however said that many of these unregistered MSOs were in effect local cable operators who retransmitted signals to other LCOs.

    With the home ministry directive about doing away with security clearances for MSOs not communicated in writing to the MIB, confusion prevailed over slowing down of the registration processes of MSOs for delivering services in DAS areas. The Government already deferred to 31 January 2017 the sunset date for Phase III (from 31 December 2015) and 31 March 2917 for Phase IV (from 31 December 2016).

    Minister of state Rajyavardhan Rathore had attributed the delay in response to a question in the last session of the Parliament to legal cases, filed mostly by cable operators relating to some phases of digital rollout.

    An MIB official pointed out after the DAS Task Force Meeting in November 2016 that cash crunch due to demonetisation of high-value currency notes has only added to the problem on the ground slowing down the rollout.

    The cancellations exclude four cases – Kal Cables of Chennai, Godfather Communication Pvt. Ltd of Amritsar, Digi Cable Network (India) Pvt Ltd of Mumbai, and Intermedia Cable Communication Pvt. Ltd of Delhi — in which provisional or permanent registrations were issued after High Courts stayed the cancellation orders in petitions filed by these MSOs. Most of the other cases in the list of cancelled registrations had failed to get security clearance from the MHA. However, there are cases of many MSOs holding provisional licences not completing certain formalities relating to shareholders and other details.

    According to the latest list, the areas of operation of one MSO in the provisional list has been revised after 30 November 2016.

    Of the new licensees, eight have got pan-India licences. These are Rajesh Fun Square, and  Aeon Communication Pvt. Ltd.of Mumbai; Superhits Digital Technologies Limited of NOIDA; Ozone Media.Comm Private Limited of Delhi; Hathway Datacom Central Private Limited of Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh, and three MSOs in Uttar Pradesh: Juber Cable Network in Gonnaur, Nucast Media Private Limited in Mathura; and Garvit Digital Services Private Limited in Agra.

    The other new registrations after November 2016 include state-wide licences or for specific districts in Bihar, Karnataka, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Telengana, Andhra Pradesh, Manipur, Odisha, Punjab, Delhi and West Bengal.

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  • MSO registrations remain slow even as DAS deadlines approach

    MSO registrations remain slow even as DAS deadlines approach

    NEW DELHI: The registration of multi-system operators (MSOs) remained slow with 71 provisional clearances in December 2016 and up to 4 January 2017 taking the total to 1130 despite the fact that less than a month is left for Phase III analogue switch-off and two months before the final phase of digital addressable system DAS deadline gets over.

    The number of permanent MSOs (with 10-year licences) remained static at 229, while the number of cancellations remained at 44 as intimated on 30 November 2016. Of the 71 entrants, 21 were registered in the first four days of January 2017.

    The total number of MSOs is miniscule when compared to the information and broadcasting ministry’s own estimate that there are an estimated 6000 MSOs in the country. A ministry official however said that many of these unregistered MSOs were in effect local cable operators who retransmitted signals to other LCOs.

    With the home ministry directive about doing away with security clearances for MSOs not communicated in writing to the MIB, confusion prevailed over slowing down of the registration processes of MSOs for delivering services in DAS areas. The Government already deferred to 31 January 2017 the sunset date for Phase III (from 31 December 2015) and 31 March 2917 for Phase IV (from 31 December 2016).

    Minister of state Rajyavardhan Rathore had attributed the delay in response to a question in the last session of the Parliament to legal cases, filed mostly by cable operators relating to some phases of digital rollout.

    An MIB official pointed out after the DAS Task Force Meeting in November 2016 that cash crunch due to demonetisation of high-value currency notes has only added to the problem on the ground slowing down the rollout.

    The cancellations exclude four cases – Kal Cables of Chennai, Godfather Communication Pvt. Ltd of Amritsar, Digi Cable Network (India) Pvt Ltd of Mumbai, and Intermedia Cable Communication Pvt. Ltd of Delhi — in which provisional or permanent registrations were issued after High Courts stayed the cancellation orders in petitions filed by these MSOs. Most of the other cases in the list of cancelled registrations had failed to get security clearance from the MHA. However, there are cases of many MSOs holding provisional licences not completing certain formalities relating to shareholders and other details.

    According to the latest list, the areas of operation of one MSO in the provisional list has been revised after 30 November 2016.

    Of the new licensees, eight have got pan-India licences. These are Rajesh Fun Square, and  Aeon Communication Pvt. Ltd.of Mumbai; Superhits Digital Technologies Limited of NOIDA; Ozone Media.Comm Private Limited of Delhi; Hathway Datacom Central Private Limited of Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh, and three MSOs in Uttar Pradesh: Juber Cable Network in Gonnaur, Nucast Media Private Limited in Mathura; and Garvit Digital Services Private Limited in Agra.

    The other new registrations after November 2016 include state-wide licences or for specific districts in Bihar, Karnataka, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Telengana, Andhra Pradesh, Manipur, Odisha, Punjab, Delhi and West Bengal.

    ALSO READ:

    Slow pace of court cases, MSO registration may delay DAS deadline

    DAS 4 deadline extended to 31 Mar

  • Movies OK says it did not go off air

    Movies OK says it did not go off air

    NEW DELHI: As the Delhi high court ordered a stay on the order of the inter-ministerial committee relating to suspending telecast for 24 hours from midnight of 2 May, Movies OK has clarified that the channel was never taken off the air as reported earlier by indiantelevision.com (based on the ministry of information and broadcasting’s website).

     

    The ministry had directed the punitive action on the channel for allegedly showing a film ‘Dil Jale’ on 18 June last year with an ‘Adult’ certificate at 6.12 pm, refusing to accept the argument that the certificate was shown by human error as the version shown had been issued a U/V certificate.

     

    However, the channel got the order stayed on the ground that it was issued the ministry directive only at 5.30 pm on 1 May. The court also heard counsel for the government had listed the case for further hearing on 26 July. Justice Rajiv Shakhder said “I am of the view that since enough time was not available to the petitioner to collect the relevant material in order to challenge the findings to which I have made a reference to above, I am inclined to stay the impinged order till the next date of hearing. It is ordered accordingly.”
    In a statement following a story by this website, the channel said: “Star India would like to clarify that it is factually incorrect to state that the channel faced closure for 24-hours as no such action was taken. Contrary to what the article suggests, the channel wasn’t taken off air at all.”