Shift medium wave
channels on FM and take them around the country: Jawhar Sircar
source:www.radioandmusic.com
|
NEW
DELHI: In a scenario where the receiver sets for Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM)
are out of the reach of the common man owing to the cost factor, the best
alternative for All India Radio is to take the national channel across the
country through a network of FM stations, Prasar Bharati CEO Jawhar Sircar
said today(23-07-2013).
Addressing a meet on Radio in a Digital Age to mark 86 years of
broadcasting in India, Sircar said that this could be achieved by
transmitters set up at regular intervals of seventy to eighty kilometers
since the FM channels being terrestrial had a limited spectrum and range.
This would result in vacating the Medium Wave spectrum and thus lower the
costs for - what he called - ‘FM-isation of the country’.
He said there was urgent need to take a call on this issue at a time when
broadcasting was poised for a digital leap. FM, he added, was the best
technology in analogue. He said twelve to fifteen frequencies would be
enough for AIR to fulfil its mandate as a public service broadcaster.
He also felt that this could be done by Prasar Bharati without looking to
the government for financial help.He said Doordarshan digital terrestrial
transmission (DTT) and ‘FM-isation’ of AIR was the way to go forward at
this juncture.
Earlier, AIR DG L D Mandloi said that AIR was already building a network
of 100 watt transmitters all over the country to take Vividh Bharati and
other popular channels all over the country.
Veteran agricultural scientist M S Swaminathan presided over the
discussion, in which senior mediaperson B G Verghese, artiste Vidhushi
Shanti Hiranand, litterateurs Prof Namvar Singh, Prof. R B Singh, and R K
Singh spoke. There was a musical evening with presentations by the AIR
Orchestra (on 100 Years of Indian Cinema), and a ghazal presentation by
Ustad Ahmed Hussain Mohammed Hussain.
Professor Swaminathan said that the green revolution became a reality
only because of All India Radio which made available transistors at low
rates to the farmers so that they could learn about the latest varieties
of seeds etc. He said the growth from the green revolution to the Food
Security Bill were achievements of AIR.
Mr B G Verghese, who had chaired the first-ever committee set up by the
Government in the late seventies to suggest an autonomous framework for
AIR and Doordarshan, regretted that the role of radio had been ignored
after the Supreme Court judgment of February 1995 that air waves were
public property.
He said AIR had kept alive the culture of India by broadcasting in 29
languages and many dialects. He also wanted to know why AIR was still
known as sarkari Radio when it was broadcasting so many other things
besides news.
Referring to the Akash Bharati Trust report prepared by the committee
headed by him in the last seventies at the behest of then Information and
Broadcasting Minister L K Advani, he said the committee had later been
told it had been asked to prepare a blueprint for autonomy, but the report
advocated independence.
Refusing to mince words, Verghese wanted to know why the top posts in both
AIR and Doordarshan were still occupied by government officials and why
broadcast engineers were not permitted to rise to the post of
Director-General.
It was unfortunate, he said, that all political parties had misused the
concept of a public service broadcaster by turning it into a mouthpiece.
In any case, advertisers were often deciding what should go on air.
He also regretted that no one appeared to have thoroughly read the Prasar
Bharati Act 1990, which in any case was implemented only in 1997. The Act
had the answers to many of the questions raised by those concerned.
Renowned vocal artiste Shanti Hiranand said that Indian classical music
owed its existence to AIR, since no other channel had bothered to keep
heritage alive. She said the AIR archives were a treasure trove of the
country’s heritage in music and the arts. She also said that AIR had
united the nation through its musical programmes.
Veteran litterateur Namvar Singh said the Archives were a repository of
the languages and dialects of the nation, but were not being given the
pride of place.
R K Singh who has served with Doordarshan, welcomed digitisation of AIR
provided it did not affect the quality of content. He also referred to
internet broadcasting which may leave behind all these technologies.
R B Singh who has been expert in agricultural broadcasts said there was
need to concentrate on the rural youth of the country and in educating
people in rural areas against problems like malnutrition. Community Radio
Stations could play a major role in this. He said it was a paradox that
malnutrition had hit the children of the people who grew food for others –
the agriculturists.
The event was held on 23 July, 86 years to the day in 1927 when the
private Indian Broadcasting company ltd (IBC) was authorised to operate
two radio stations in Mumbai and Kolkata.
|||||| Thank you for your interest.||||||
|