• Confusion over CAS fate as rumours awash that impending cabinet reshuffle may see I&B ministry change of guard

    There has been another fallout of the much-hyped issue of CAS' failure to get the okay of members of Parliament from

  • Disney Channel to debut on DTH service in Korea 1 June

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 20, 2002

    Mickey Mouse is coming to Korea. Come 1 June, viewers in Seoul will be able to tune into the antics of Disney‘s rodent on television. The Disney Channel will be carried on Korean DTH service provider, Korea Digital Satellite Broadcasting (KDB) on channel 654 under the "Skylife" brandname. KDB president & CEO Hyeon-Dew Kang, and Walt Disney Television International managing director for branded television - Asia Pacific - Jon Niermann had earlier signed an agreement sealing the deal on 9 April.

    Making the announcement of the 1 June debut, Walt Disney Television International president David Hulbert said: "Korea is a market that shows tremendous potential for growth in the cable and satellite industry. This is an important step in expanding our presence throughout the region."

    The Korean Broadcasting Commission granted Disney Channel approval as a foreign re-transmission channel early this year. Negotiations between KDB and Disney began in the middle of 2001 and culminated in an agreement recently. On 1 March 2002, KDB launched its Skylife service with a ceremony held in Seoul which was attended by Korean President Kim Dae Jung. Disney Channel has offered KDB customers a "preview" channel since 26 March. With Disney launching, KDB expects Skylife to reach 500,000 Korean households by December 2002.

    Disney Channel Asia, which is headed by managing director Raymund Miranda, is now available in five countries around the region: Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and the Philippines. It was launched in January 2000 and is a multi-language feed with both dubbing and subtitling in Mandarin, and a main feed in English. The Korean feed will be broadcast in English with Korean subtitles.

    The Asian television service is available in seven countries in the Asia Pacific region: Australia, Korea, Malaysia, South Korea, Singapore, Brunei and the Philippines. The Korean feed will be broadcast in English with Korean subtitles.

    Disney branded programs are broadcast on local free-to-air networks in 12 countries around the region, reaching a total audience of 300 million in the Asia-Pacific.

    In India Disney programming is watched on Sony Entertainment Television, Eenadu TV, and Doordarshan. Disney which normally takes time to enter a new country, has been studying a foray into India with its 24-hour service for the past three to four years but has held back because its cable TV networks are not truly addressable. It has recently applied to the country‘s foreign investment promotion board for clearance to get into broadcasting activities.

  • Disney Channel to debut on DTH service in Korea 1 June

    Mickey Mouse is coming to Korea.

  • Star Movies, HBO, MTV among satellite channels banned in Bangladesh

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 20, 2002

    The Bangladesh government has clamped down on eight Indian popular satellite pay channels and five FTA channels to "resist the adverse impact of alien culture on religious and social values."

    According to the Bangladeshi newspaper Daily Star, the decision to ban HBO, Star Movies, MTV, Channel V, AXN, MGM and Hallmark, was taken at a joint meeting of different TV channels, cable ops and channel distributors with officials of the ministry of information.

    The newspaper, quoting official press releases, said that the meeting ‘unanimously decided‘ to shut out the channels until further orders. The clampdown on Star Movies, Star World and HBO is being implemented despite objections by the channel distributors, reports say. Cable ops also agreed to stop telecasting five ‘free-to-air‘ channels - RAI TV, PTP, TVE, MTV and SNTV, out of respect to "the socio-cultural and religious sentiment" of the people, the handout added.

    The cable operators, bowing to government diktat, also promised not to show VCD movies, while ATN Bangla too toed the line by assuring that it would not telecast ‘objectionable foreign films‘ in future.

    Information Minister Tariqul Islam chaired the meeting, media reports say. Reports say the information minister thanked the satellite operators and distributors for expressing their solidarity with people‘s sentiments "spontaneously" by closing down "harmful" satellite channels. He has been quoted as saying that, if necessary, more channels will be closed down.

    President of the Cable Operators‘ Association of Bangladesh (COAB) SM Anwar Parvez told the Daily Star that the decision made at the meeting was immediately implemented and "we switched off all the identified channels." He has been quoted by the newspaper as saying that many countries, including Pakistan, Malaysia and Australia, have restrictions on certain channels which go against public values and culture.

    The newspaper has also quoted sources as saying that the distributors of Star Movies and HBO have however, opposed the decision of shutting down these two channels.

  • Star Movies, HBO, MTV among satellite channels banned in Bangladesh

    The Bangladesh government has clamped down on eight Indian popular satellite pay channels and five FTA channels to "

  • Senior cabinet colleague scuppered Swaraj's bid to get CATV amendment bill through RS?

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 20, 2002

    That the Rajya Sabha (Indian Parliament‘s Upper House) could not take up the Cable TV Networks Regulations Amendment Bill on 17 May (last Friday), the last day before Parliament was adjourned sine die, is old news.
    But not many know how hectic behind-the-scenes confabulations between some senior ministers in the government and politicians from the Opposition saw to it that the discussion on the bill, the implementation of which will facilitate the implementation of conditional access system (CAS) in cable homes, was not accorded priority.

    After the Lok Sabha (Lower House) passed by voice vote the amendments to the CATV Act on CAS last Wednesday, it was expected information and broadcasting minister Sushma Swaraj would manage to get the Bill passed in the Rajya Sabha too. But that was not to be and the bill now has to either wait for the monsoon session of Parliament or, if the government so desires, then the President can promulgate an Ordinance (an executive order) making introduction of CAS a necessity in a phased manner.

    The course of events were as follows. Political sources say that on Friday, in the forenoon, an influential and senior minister in the government held discussions on CAS with Rajya Sabha opposition members. It needs noting that the BJP-led NDA government does not have a majority in the Upper House.

    The agenda of the meeting: why CAS should not be hurried through without proper discussion and should preferably be referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Information Technology and Telecom (headed by the veteran Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader Somnath Chatterjee. The CPM is the largest single political party in the Rajya Sabha).

    An hour later, the sources say, Swaraj too, spoke to various Rajya Sabha opposition members on the benefits of CAS.

    Now it seems that the persuasive powers of Swaraj‘s colleague prevailed over the members who deemed it fit that more importance should be given to the Jammu & Kashmir situation and other related issues like security of the nation rather than to the CATV Amendment Bill which, according to Swaraj, would usher in a new revolution in Indian cable TV homes.

    That a senior minister in the government spoke to senior MPs of the Rajya Sabha is confirmed. But when indiantelevision.com attempted to get in touch with Swaraj for her version, we were told over the weekend that she was busy. On Monday her office informed us that that she, along with a delegation of people from the world of entertainment, had already left for the Cannes Film Festival.

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