Tag: Vicky Chowdhry

  • Cable ops divided on opposition to Rs 72 FTA rate

    Cable ops divided on opposition to Rs 72 FTA rate

    NEW DELHI: On one side the smiles have broadened, while on the other side the scowls have deepened.
     
     
    Broadcasters, specially those managing pay channels, may have reasons to smile amidst tensions since late last week when the government finalised the rate of the basic tier of free to air cable channels at Rs 72 per month, 67 paise more than what had been recommended by task force on conditional access. Some cable operators, on the other hand, have definitely got busy with legalities to find loopholes in the relevant rules so as to move the court.

    A notification to this effect is now expected soon, though till late in the evening government sources had no idea when the notification would be finally issued that would formalise the price of the basic tier. Information and broadcasting minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told journalists in Chennai late last week that his ministry has cleared the price of the basic tier at Rs 72.

    Though broadcasters are tightlipped on the developments — there’s an Indian Broadcasting Foundation meeting tomorrow here after which more information may tumble out — a section of cable operators are almost up in arms.

    Cable Networks Association’s Rakesh Dutta, Cable Operators Federation of India’s Roop Sharma (both members of the task force on CAS) and Vicky Chowdhry of the National Cable and Telecom Association may not have much love lost amongst them, but on one issue today they are unanimous: the price of Rs 72 for the basic tier is too low and that some legal action may have to be taken.

    Speaking to indiantelevision.com from Kolkata, Sharma, one of the oldest leaders of cable ops though she is no more a cable operator herself anymore, said, “We are exploring all options, including seeking legal redressal on the issue.”

    Sharma added that she has organised a symposiums and meet in Kolkata today and tomorrow after which a similar thing would be done in Mumbai too to awaken the cable ops to their fundamental right to carry on a business to earn a livelihood, which would become difficult if the government sticks to its stand on Rs 72 per month per household for the basic tier of cable service.

    Both Dutta and Chowdhry also added that they are consulting lawyers to study the ground on which the pricing issue can be challenged in court. This may include the confusion that still prevails over set-top boxes and their availability, despite assertions to the contrary made by the likes of Siti Cable’s Jawahar Goel.

    However, there is also a section of cable operators that feels no step should be taken that would delay the implementation of CAS, which is in “national interest.”

    “Moving courts on CAS may be playing into the hands of those vested interest who are trying to delay its rollout,” AK Rastogi, an independent cable operator in Delhi, who also runs an industry cable magazine called Avishkar, said.

    Meanwhile, the broadcasters would meet tomorrow under the aegis of the IBF to chalk out an action plan (related to CAS, of course) for a meeting some broadcasters have sought with a parliamentary panel day after tomorrow.

  • Swaraj slams broadcasters’ opposition to CAS, says pressure tactics will not work

    Swaraj slams broadcasters’ opposition to CAS, says pressure tactics will not work

    A day before the amendments to the Cable TV Networks Regulations Act, 1995, is slated to be introduced in Parliament, information and broadcasting minister Sushma Swaraj lashed out at the broadcasters saying “their pressure tactics would not work with her as CAS is in the interest of cable viewing consumers.”

    In a meeting with some 25-odd cable operators from various parts of the country, Swaraj said that the government is determined to see the amendments to the Act concerned passed before 17 May when Parliament takes a break.

    The minister is reported to have told the delegation of cable operators that “talks of referring the amendments to the Act relating to the CAS to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on IT and Telecom are all delaying tactics which would not work.”

    According to Vicky Chowdhry,a Delhi cable operator who attended the meeting: “The minister was sympathetic towards the problems of the cable operators and exhorted the broadcasters not to further raise the subscription fee of the pay channels in the interim till the time CAS is implemented as it will be unfair for the consumer.”

    Another cable operator who attended the meeting said that Swaraj also assured them that a separate notification regarding CAS would be issued for the states of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh after consultations with the chief ministers concerned if the cable operators thought CAS would benefit the consumer.

    The government is initially thinking of implementing the CAS in the four metros – Delhi, Mumbai, Calcutta and Chennai.