Tag: Tsunami disaster

  • CNN gets Dupont Award for Tsunami coverage

    CNN gets Dupont Award for Tsunami coverage

    MUMBAI: CNN has received the prestigious Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award in the US for its distinguishing coverage of the South Asia tsunami disaster. The judges cited CNN for its ability to provide in-depth reports about a major natural disaster while under considerable deadline and logistical pressures.

    CNN US president Jim Walton says, “We are thrilled that the duPont panelists determined that our coverage of the tsunami disaster merited their prestigious award. We certainly believe that our reports were nothing short of extraordinary in their scope, effectiveness and reach. Because of the cooperation among our networks, our journalists were empowered to go far beyond basic reporting to tell the full story of the disaster.”

    Demonstrating its reputation as the leading international news network, CNN offered unprecedented round-the-clock coverage of the disaster. Within hours of the news breaking, CNN’s Asia Pacific regional headquarters in Hong Kong had deployed reporters and crew to cover the disaster including Mike Chinoy, Atika Shubert, Satinder Bindra, Stan Grant, Hugh Riminton, Aneesh Raman and Ram Ramgopal. They reported from locations across the region including near the epicenter in Banda Aceh and across Sri Lanka, Thailand, India and Indonesia.

    In all, more than 80 of the network’s top anchors, correspondents and producers were deployed. With state-of-the-art broadcasting technology including two satellite dishes, CNN’s reports came from all coasts of the Indian Ocean.

    The network produced two special reports Turning the Tide and a documentary Saving the Children anchored by Christiane Amanpour and Anderson Cooper. In addition, CNN.com featured timely and in-depth reports and provided a survivor locator service that reunited more than 100 families and friends.

    CNN’s 10th duPont Award was among 13 chosen from a pool of 628 radio and television news entries that aired in the US between 1 July, 2004, and 30 June, 2005. The winners will be presented with silver batons, the symbol for excellence in television and radio journalism, at an awards ceremony on 18 January 2006 at Columbia University.

    In honouring CNN, duPont jurors wrote, “When the tsunami struck South Asia last December, CNN immediately leveraged its overseas bureaus by switching to CNN International to inform US audiences about the disaster. This up-to-the-minute stream of coverage from a deep and nimble roster of correspondents on the ground in Asia demonstrated the power of well-informed reporting under pressure and in dangerous circumstances. CNN’s detailed reporting across the entire region included contextual issues often missed in fast-breaking reporting.”

    The Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards recognise excellence in broadcast journalism and have been administered by the Graduate School of Journalism since 1968. Created by Jessie Ball duPont in 1942 as a tribute to the journalistic integrity and public-mindedness of her late husband, Alfred I. duPont, the Awards are now regarded as the most prestigious prizes in television and radio news, the broadcast equivalent of the Pulitzer Prizes, which the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism also administers.

  • Ambivalent ministry; verbose minister

    Circa: 2004. Characteristic of his verbosity, information and broadcasting minister Jaipal Reddy had mentioned in Parliament that he’s “dusting” the Broadcast Bill that he had tabled in the House in 1997 to guide his ministry in bringing about a Bill on a regulatory framework afresh.

     

    Cut to the present times. The dusting seems to be still happening as — one industry player pointed out — too much of dust, probably, has settled on the files and the old proposed regulatory framework.

     

    In one year’s time the ministry, captained by Reddy, has put up an average performance, especially when it was thought that because of his past experience in the ministry, things would move at a fast pace. Just to give an example, except giving uplink permission to some TV channels, no substantial policy decision has been taken by the I&B ministry in one year’s time.

     

    Rather, as a TV company said, things have been complicated further because of not only inaction, but lack of understanding of the media sector by the bureaucrats in the ministry. And Reddy, hemmed in by political compulsions too, has been unable to provide the sort of leadership that the sector would have desired.

     

    For instance, a set of recommendations on radio broadcast policy that had been submitted to the ministry in August by sector regulator is still going around various ministries for feedback, which still keeps it at distance from the clearance post. “Unless the recommendations, in whatever form, are taken to the Cabinet, how can the I&B ministry expect them to be cleared or rejected ?” a private radio FM station manager retorted, giving vent to his frustration.

     

    What’s more, the lackadaisical way Reddy and his ministry handled the publication of International Herald Tribune from India by an Indian company and the furore it generated last year speaks volumes of the attitude. Not only the ministry refused to issue an official ultimatum to the publishers of IHT in the initial phase, but also kept feeding the media informally, which carried less weight.

     

    Of course, what acted as an impediment was the fact that the Indian publishers of IHT were breaking no law or rule. Simply because the guidelines had not been notified by the previous government that took away the biting power.

     

    The off-the-record briefing of the media by Reddy on important issues took a hilarious turn, when some months back a seemingly insignificant matter like minor iscrepancies in a series of CDs brought out by the government on the works of Father of the Nation made the minister scurry to call an official conference. Next day the item as a short item.

    WORK LEFT UNDONE

     

    A year is too little time for the I&B ministry to take a decision on…

     

    …DTH applications pending with it. Prominent amongst the four are that of Space TV (a JV between the Tatas and Star) and Sun TV.

     

    …radio broadcast policy, which is turning the private FM radio companies red as their bottomlines have plunged, while hampering additional inflow of revenue in the government kitty in the form of licence fee and/or revenue sharing.

     

    …an overall regulatory framework for the broadcast and cable sector despite the `dusting’ of old files that had been promised.

     

    …sector regulator’s recommendations on introducing addressability in the Indian cable homes to take the industry forward into a digital era.

    Suggestions received by the ministry in October.

     

    …to carry forward work on bilateral treaties with other countries, started by the previous government, to boost the film industry’s prospects and also attract FDI in the form of making India a favourite destination for foreign film-makers.

     

    …to even formulate a consensus on whether foreign newspapers should be allowed to print from India despite IHT doing so.

     

    … Whether Indian pubcaster should be financially supported to make forays abroad on pay platforms, especially in the UK and the US.

     

    …formulate service rules for employees of Prasar Bharati, an autonomous organization that manages DD and All India Radio, which has resulted in the organisation bloating further as inefficiency has increased.

     

    … for anything substantial other than holding lengthy briefings on Tsunami disaster management, just because the I&B secretary headed the secretaries panel overseeing relief work.

  • Star News sets up relief fund to assist victims of Tsunami disaster

    Star News sets up relief fund to assist victims of Tsunami disaster

    MUMBAI: Star News in an endeavour to alleviate in some measure the plight of the victims of the Tsunami devastation has set up the “Star News Relief Fund” in an urgent response . The news channel has pledged Rs one million to endorse its own commitment to the cause and to appeal to all concerned citizens to donate generously.

    In one of the more deadly natural calamities of recent years, at last count more than 20,000 Asians had been reported to have lost their lives on Sunday 26 December as the devastating Tsunami swept across Asia. India appears to have been worst affected with the real toll in terms of the thousands of lives lost and property worth millions of rupees destroyed still being counted.

    To assist in the relief fund, contributions by way of cheques / DDs can be made out in the name of the “Star News Relief Fund” and mailed to:
    Star News Centre,
    Off. Dr. E. Moses Road,
    Mahalaxmi,
    Mumbai 400011.