Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Media Ministry in courts

The list keeps on extending. First CBNsat takes them to courts, then LBN and now Raja takes them to courts according to a report on the Daily Mirror dated Wednesday 15th November 2006.

The case has now been postponed to November 28th since Raja had not tendered their broadcasting license in courts. They have cited the Media Minister and TRC Chairman as the respondents.

It seems that on Nov 9th Colombo Communications Limited has received a fax from the Media Ministry asking them to suspend the transmissions because of the controversial program. On November 10th, Colombo Communications Limited has received a fax from the TRC stating the immediate withdrawal of the frequencies allocated to Raja FM.

Raja FM has claimed that it has reliable information that several interested parties are taking steps to seek the reallocation of frequencies withdrawn by the TRC.

So after suspending the station they have also withdrawn the frequencies allocated to this station which has been allocated to CCL and can be used by any of their other radio stations.

So it looks like the conspirators are really moving fast to setup their own radio station. Our view is that the program should have been banned but not the station. Withdrawing the frequencies has brought out the real motive behind this. The suspension was not done for the love of the country rather for the love of money.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

just like when satnet and TV lanka felt threatened then they created issues with CBN and LBN through authorities. As soon as a new radio station comes into play with the same connections Raja FM has issues.who will be next is the question that need to be asked as obviously a person with even a little common sense do not need to be explained what is really going on...

Anonymous said...

looks like the blog administrator is been paid by these vulgar institutions.For sure he's a CBNsat customer and he's been paid by them to mislead the general public.Now he's going shouting about RajaFM.He's a spineless freako who just goes from one bus halt to another shouting without any facts.

Get the facts straight man without blaming a government without knowing whats happening.You reading the papers in the morning keeps on pasting information without checking the whether the reporter has made a correct evaluation.

we see you as a person who can be bought for a bottle of whiskey to write any damn bullshit

Anonymous said...

Here's a famous sri lankan teledrama actress Maheshika in a bikini.

http://www.debonairblog.com/blog/archives/2006/05/05/4340/hot-pics-of-sri-lankan-slut/

Cheeya hari wal. Government should ban her.

Anonymous said...

Maheshika

(Tharu Kumari)

Anonymous said...


MEDIA MINISTRY HAS DONE A GOOD THING. KEEP IT UP. DON'T JUST TAKE THE FREQUENCIES OF SUCH STATIONS. TAKE THE MEDIA LICENCE GIVEN TO THEM TOO.

THESE FREQUENCIES ARE THE PROPERTIES OF THE NATION. THEY SHOULD BE GIVEN ACCORDINGLY. TO SERVE THE NATION. NOT TO DESTROY OUR VALUES.

GOOD WORK MEDIA MINISTER AND THE PRESIDENT.

BLOG ADMIN HAS BECOME LIKE FMM. SHOUTING WITHOUT THE FACTS. DO NOT COMPARE RAJA (VANACHARA) FM WITH CBNSAT OR LBN.

justavisitor said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
justavisitor said...

Read this
Rupavahini Upasakayo "Gatawra Wiyata" Bayawei

Anonymous said...

When Politicle stooges ask what they want, they say I want a Radio frequency. Now our airwaves are full useless channels.

Vimasamu (විමසමු) said...

As i think author of this post is an anti goverment person. I agree with him in cbnsat cause. But definitly not in this raja fm cause.

justavisitor said...

The Sri Lankan government's broadcast stranglehold

Nalaka Gunawardene debunks the globally persistent myth that community radio has been thriving in Sri Lanka

By Nalaka Gunawardene
AsiaMedia Contributing Writer

Friday, November 17, 2006

Colombo --- The Sri Lankan government's suspension of Raja FM on Nov. 9 has raised more concerns about the absence of transparency and due process in the government's dealings with stations that are not supported by the state. Similar government actions have come to characterise Sri Lanka's broadcast liberalisation process over the last 15 years.

It is also a firm reminder that the once-dreaded cultural police and moral guardians are back, wearing new robes of extreme nationalism and fundamentalism. The ban of the private radio channel is merely the latest in a series of assaults on freedom of expression.

Raja FM is owned by Colombo Communication Private Limited, one of nearly two dozen commercial channels that crowd the FM bandwidth. The government said it shut down the channel because it "broadcast anti social and extremely repulsive and vulgar material that could corrupt the society, specially [sic] the younger generation." The Ministry of Mass Media and Information claimed it "received a large number of complaints from the intellectuals, religious leaders, media personnel and society leaders," and thus banned the radio channel under a 40-year-old law, the Societal Good Conduct Act No. 37 of 1966.

Successive Sri Lankan governments have shared the dubious distinction of cracking down on independent newspapers that have been overly critical of government policies and actions. But this is the first time a privately owned radio or TV channel has been shutdown since broadcast liberalisation started in the early 1990s.

The Free Media Movement (FMM),the country's leading media rights group, expressed serious concerns over the banning of Raja FM: "If Raja FM broadcasts any such programmes, instead of banning the channel, the government should have followed the due process to determine the remedial steps," FMM's convenor Sunanda Deshapriya said.

Sri Lankan media are indeed sailing in rough seas. The Worldwide Press Freedom Index, compiled annually by Reporters Without Borders (RSF), recently ranked Sri Lanka at 141st of the 168 countries assessed for 2006 -- a dramatic drop from its 52nd rank in 2002, when a ceasefire was brokered between government troops and the Tamil Tigers that halted a protracted civil war between the two groups.

But the banning of Raja FM is much more than a media freedom issue. It brings into sharp focus a disturbing trend that now all too often seems to shape public policy and governmental action in Sri Lanka.

First, a handful of private individuals or a hitherto unknown group will protest against a media organisation or a cultural product (FMM says that "extreme nationalist forces" launched and e-mail campaign against Raja FM ahead of government intervention.). The individual or group will make the allegation that the media organization or cultural product is detrimental to cultural norms, insensitive to a particular ethnic or religious group or threatens national security. How vocally these viewpoints are promoted matters more than the logic or coherence of these assertions.

After allegations are made, a public official will begin to champion the agitators' cause, usually without any public debate. Then, the government will impose bans, suspensions or protectionist measures.

In 2006 alone, this cycle has led to the banning of the Hollywood movie The Da Vinci Code, the imposition of unreasonably high taxes on foreign TV programming imported by local broadcasters and the sealing of two local pay-TV channels for alleged threats to national security. This summer, the Cultural Ministry withdrew the initial censor board approval granted for public screening of Aksharaya (Letter of Fire), the latest feature film by internationally acclaimed film-maker Asoka Handagama. A sexually-charged art film exploring incest, it fell foul of Sinhala nationalists who called it a foreign-funded attempt to discredit Sri Lanka.

In each of these cases, bureaucratic action was preceded by a short-lived smear campaign by a small group of angry individuals or business rivals. There was no due process, and some affected individuals and companies were forced to turn to the courts -- which can take months or years to hear cases -- for legal redress. And bans, once imposed, are not easily withdrawn, unless ordered by courts.

When it comes to radio and TV broadcasting, private operators are completely at the government's mercy. The highly discretionary broadcast licensing system has always lacked transparency, accountability and consistency from the time private broadcasting was first permitted in 1992. Since then, several governments have been in office, and while election manifestos regularly promised the creation of a broadcasting authority, such a body has not yet materialised.

By default, broadcasting is still governed by the laws and regulations that were used to set up state-owned radio and TV stations decades ago. These laws allow state-owned stations to regulate their competitors in the private sector.

In practice, Sri Lanka's broadcast liberalisation has been partial and lop-sided. Both the main political parties have given out radio and TV licenses to family members or friends -- licenses that are valuable political IOUs during crises or elections. Some broadcast licenses have changed hands for millions of dollars. But whatever the price, all licenses can be revoked or cancelled by the government at any time without reason. It's the Sword of Damocles that hangs over all privately owned radio and TV stations. No wonder, then, that self censorship is widely practised.

Meanwhile, community groups are not being issued broadcast licenses. Senior officials have privately explained that they fear airwaves will be misused for anti-social or political purposes. They have not, strangely enough, voiced such concerns about profit-making companies, some of whose channels are openly-aligned with political parties.

A globally persistent myth holds that community radio has been thriving in Sri Lanka for two decades. In reality, these broadcasters are nothing more than rural transmissions of the fully state-owned and state-controlled Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC). Yes, these stations are located in remote areas, involve local people in programme production and broadcast to a predominantly rural audience. But the bureaucracy in Colombo tightly-controls content: nothing remotely critical of the government in office is permitted.

The rest of the world does not recognise this as community radio. The World Association of Community Broadcasters (AMARC), defines community radio as non-profit with the community having complete control over the content of broadcasts.

Ironically, only armed rebels have defied this stranglehold by successive governments. The Marxist People's Liberation Front ran Rana Handa (Sound of Victory) in the 1980s when it was spearheading a youth insurgency. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) ran Voice of Tigers (VOT) for years, making a complete mockery of Colombo's broadcast regulations. In November 2002, as part of a Norwegian-brokered ceasefire arrangement, the government granted a license for the Tamil Tigers to continue its broadcasts legally. That was the first time -- and so far, the only time -- the state has ever conceded a license to a group that is neither part of the state nor a profit-making company. All governments since 1992 have refrained from granting any broadcast licenses to non-profit, non-governmental groups.

Organisations such as Sarvodaya -- the country's largest development NGO -- are keen to use the airwaves for the public good and have the capability to deliver relevant content. But, even as India is beginning to allow genuine community radio, Sri Lanka stubbornly refuses to democratise its the airwaves.

The privileged few companies that hold broadcast licenses should know better than to rock the boat. The banning of Raja FM should make them realise how perilous the situation is for every broadcaster who is unwilling to amplify the voice of government. It is in their interests -- and everybody else's -- to support the long-standing call for an independent broadcasting authority.

Anonymous said...

stop using acresses as your blog magnets. they do deserve some respect as normal people in this society. describing them as sluts ; i think thats some kind of a mental illness. all of the actresses in srilanka will be sluts from your point of view. but thats not the question shes not nude in there only in a bikini so if you a thik thats sluttish all of the forigners and local humps we see wearing bekinies along the beach should be sluts too. i thnik that this is something she'd done years ago before entering acting. to be in a magazine cover or something. shes not doing them anymore. im not saying its right but thats not a reason to insult her by digging old graves like that.she s not a slut i can tell you.