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News |  26 Aug 2013 20:32 |  By RnMTeam

Media must not morph into a campaign of calumny, cautions PM

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called for caution as mediapersons executing their responsibilities in a vibrant democracy which revels in free enquiry and quest for answers.

He said the media industry had a special role in assessing, tackling and overcoming the challenges that two decades of socio-economic change have brought about. “But a spirit of inquiry must not morph into a campaign of calumny. A witch-hunt is no substitute for investigative journalism. And personal prejudices must not replace the public good.”

Dr Singh was speaking after he and UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi inaugurated the National Media Centre in the capital this morning. Information and Broadcasting Minister Manish Tewari, I and B Secretary Bimal Julka, and Press Information Bureau Principal Director General Neelam Kapoor were also present.

Singh said “It is a reality that journalism cannot be divorced from the business of which it is a part. The responsibilities of a media organisation are not limited to the viewers and readers alone. The companies also have an obligation to their investors and shareholders. The tussle between bottom-lines and headlines is a fact of life for them. But this should not result in a situation where media organizations lose sight of their primary directive, which is to hold up a mirror to society and help provide a corrective. ”

He said “This Centre showcases our ability to keep pace with similar state-of-the-art facilities across the world. It symbolizes the vibrant mood of the existing media landscape in our country. As a ‘Communication Hub’ and a ‘Single Window’ facility, I am sure it will fulfill the needs and requirements of our media fraternity, many of whom are present here today.”

In her address, Gandhi said “The government and the media have the shared interest in disseminating programmes, policies, decisions and information. This is where an institution such as the National Press Centre assumes importance. I hope that it will represent a partnership in which both sides will be able to discharge their designated responsibilities.”

“In any society undergoing dramatic and rapid transformation there is constant need to renew and rebuild. This facility represents that evolution. I hope very much that it will become an effective nerve centre and a duct and an information bridge between the Government, the Media and the People,” she added.

“I want to be quite clear we don’t favor propaganda or publicity campaign simply in order to score points for the government, but the people have a right to know their legal and other entitlements. They have a right to information. They have a right to be able to make informed decisions. Only an aware and conscious citizenry can be expected to make this system work well and hold governments and political parties to account.”

Referring to the National Media Centre, Gandhi said “This beautiful building is not just brick and mortar. It is up to you media professionals, officials of Information and Broadcasting Ministry and others who will inhabit it to infuse life into it by making it an instrument to serve the people and empower them.”

The Centre at 7E Raisina Marg in the proximity of Shastri Bhavan which presently houses the Press Information Bureau was inaugurated 21 years after it was first conceptualized during the 8th five year plan (1992-97).

Tewari said: “We live in an era of an information overload. The media landscape has transformed exponentially over the past two decades. This transformation has brought its own set of challenges to the media industry. India today mirrors the world in global cross media consumption patterns.”

He said a ‘very unfortunate collateral of this epoch making change’ is the print industry globally. It was distressing to learn that iconic newspapers and magazines around the world were ceasing to print. However, India appeared to have changed this trend. The Indian newspaper market will be the only one to grow at a double-digit CAGR [Compounded Annual Growth Rate] of 10% and would emerge as the world’s sixth-largest newspaper market by 2017 as per industry reports on media and entertainment. The regional and vernacular print sector is growing on the back of rising literacy and low print media penetration as well as the heightened interest of advertisers wanting to leverage these markets.

Tewari said according to industry sources, print has a combined market penetration of a ball park of 14 per cent. Thus, the print industry has the potential to expand its footprint and readership across the national canvas. This sector thus would be able to weather the shifting sands of technology at least in the Indian context.

The Indian broadcasting sector had grown from one channel in 1991 to 852 at the last count. After statutory rationalization the number now stood at 795 odd channels, he added. While this had brought about plurality, it had resulted in market fragmentation as well.

“There are 15.4 crore TV households in India. Unfortunately the news and current affairs genre makes up only 7 per cent of the total television viewership, according to TAM cs4+all India weekly average for 2012. The remaining 93 per cent of this universe is occupied by general entrainment channels despite there being 395 odd news and current affairs channels.

He said this generated hope that there is an exponential potential for growth, provided the news broadcasters and Multi System Operators (MSO’s) are prepared to re-imagine their content and carriage paradigms respectively.

In both the print and television genres, he said the revenue model remains heavily dependent on advertising. As the advertisement cap requires a migration path synchronous with the roll out of digitization For the news broadcasting industry, Tewari hoped that the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India would re-consider its deadline.

To give consumers the benefit of better quality of service and correct the skewed revenue models in the broadcasting sector government launched a massive digitization exercise in 2012. With 10 million set top boxes seeded in Phase–I, another 20 million in Phase–II and yet another 80 million scheduled for Phase–III & IV, by the end of 2014 no one in the Broadcasting Sector can really say that bottom-lines and balance sheets in August 2013 are not looking better than in October, 2012.

The MSME sector must also endeavour to leverage this unique business opportunity and convert it into the India digitization story even in manufacturing terms.

India had 86.7 crore mobile phones, 12.4 crore Internet users with an expected growth up to 37 crores by 2017, 8 crore people on Facebook and 1.8 crore on Twitter.

The Government had recently taken a decision to create a New Media Wing in the Ministry to have an institutional presence in this virtual civilization.

He said the radio was till a decade back considered a casualty of the tectonic technological shifts but now stood poised on the threshold of a new wave. High mobile penetration and cheap call rates in our country had brought this renaissance into replay.

The film industry had completed a century of existence. This industry had grown but still had tremendous potential. As per an industry estimate, about 14 million Indians go to the movies everyday. As per another report, the film industry is valued at 112.4 billion INR [$1.741 billion], and is estimated to grow to about 193.3 billion INR [$2.994 billion] by 2017, a compound annual growth rate (C.A.G.R.) of about 11.5%. The regional film industry is a steady contributor to this growth process.

The media sector had grown by a CAGR of over 9% between 2007-2012 and was projected to grow at 15% between 2012 and 2017, Tewari added.

But there were some paradoxes that all stakeholders in this sector must try and collectively resolve to find the elusive golden mean. These included flawed Revenue Models qua Questionable Revenue Generation practices; TRPs qua truth; Media Trials qua a Fair Judicial Trail guaranteed by article 21 of the Constitution; and anonymity masquerading as privacy in the new media space - the spectre of the ‘hidden’ people, apart from Last mile neutrality among carriage providers so that content providers get a level playing field and are able to reap the benefits of convergence.

The National Media Centre (NMC) was initially conceptualized by the Press Information Bureau in 1989 to facilitate greater interaction between the Government and the media with a state-of- the-art equipped media centre. The Centre has been planned on the model of media centres in some of the capitals of the world such as Washington and Tokyo. It will have offices of the PIB as well as special facilities for the media to enable the Government to interact closely with the media.

The Centre has a Press Conference Hall for 283 media persons, a briefing room for about 60 persons, 24 Work stations for the media, a library, media lounge and cafeteria. The press conference hall and media lounge are Wi-Fi enabled.

Major Highlights

o World Class Media Center

o Ground + 4 Floors + 2 basements

o Press Conference Hall with seating capacity for 283 persons.

o Media Lounge - Work area facilities for media personnel

o Committee Room with video conferencing facilities

o Library

o Cafeteria

o IT and AV Infrastructure in NMC

o Facilities provided:

o Optic fibre internet backbone with redundancy

o Mini Data Centre for application development and hosting

o Webcast, including live webcast

o Video feed to TV channels outside the building

o Network with redundancy and expandability to 500 nodes

o IT facilities to media persons in work area/Lounge

o Internet Telephony

o AV Video Wall

The NMC has been constructed by the National Buildings Construction Corporation (NBCC) over a period of three years with a total covered area of 13867 sq m. The plot size is 7787.46 sq m (1.95 acres).

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