Pitroda recommends autonomy for Prasar Bharati
source.http://www.business-standard.com/ |
A
committee, headed by Sam Pitroda, on Friday suggested public broadcaster
Prasar Bharati will have to monetise its assets, including its real
estate, and involve the private sector in monetising some of its existing
infrastructure to generate revenue. The Pitroda committee was set up last
year to chart a future for Prasar Bharati.
The committee also recommended setting up of a global broadcaster on the
lines of the British Broadcasting Corporation to tap the international
broadcasting market. It also said some of its recommendations could be
implemented immediately.
“We want Prasar Bharati to become a public broadcaster as compared to a
government broadcaster. We need to strike a balance as far as government
funding and airing content is concerned,” Pitroda said.
Pitroda gave the report to Information and Broadcasting Minister Manish
Tewari on Friday. The committee also recommended giving power to Prasar
Bharati to frame rules and regulations and hire manpower without going to
the government for approval. The broadcaster will now undertake a manpower
audit to map its workforce for future.
“The government does need a vehicle to promote its views and we have to
take care of that. We can't take funding, have our autonomy and not have a
separate independent mechanism for government to promote its own messages
and welfare measures,” Pitroda said.
The committee also pointed out that it needed younger staff in the
engineering department to keep up with the changing times.
“We have a lot of people and there are a lot of people who are in the
50-55 age groups. There is natural attrition since more than 1,200 people
retire very year. We need younger people,” Jawahar Sircar, CEO of Prasar
Bharati, said.
Last month, a parliamentary standing committee had said the I&B ministry
was not doing much on its advice to review the institutional framework of
the public broadcaster in collaboration with the Sam Pitroda committee.
The public broadcaster currently receives a plan fund of Rs 3,500 crore
which is routed through the ministry and relations have soured between the
ministry and the broadcaster in recent times over issues of interference.
Last year, Prasar Bharati Chairman Jawhar Sircar had shot off a letter to
the I&B ministry, seeking lesser interference after the ministry
questioned the broadcaster’s plan to start four new channels.
Prasar Bharati currently has offices in more than 2,000 locations in India
and the government had last year approved a waiver of Prasar Bharati’s Rs
1,300-crore debt burden.
The committee has also recommended a review of all existing channels and
content of Doordarshan and All India radio and has asked for phasing out
programs where there is sub-optimal utilization of resources.
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