Business Standard

ASCI, NCW join hands to monitor ‘indecent’ ads

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

The Advertisin­g Standards Council of India (ASCI) will now work closely with the National Commission for Women (NCW) to monitor indecent advertisem­ents as part of a wider centralise­d authority mooted by the Women and Child Developmen­t (WCD) Ministry. The NCW, for the record, falls under the WCD Ministry.

The ministry, under Maneka Gandhi, had finalised fresh amendments last month to the Indecent Representa­tion of Women (Prohibitio­n) Act, 1986, widening its scope to make indecent portrayal of women on digital and social media platforms punishable with a fine of ~200,000, and a prison term of up to three years.

ASCI, along with other bodies, including the Ministry of Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng (MIB) and Press Council of India, will be tasked with identifyin­g ads and other promotiona­l material (such as television shows) that represent women indecently, an area that the ad regulator and MIB have been working for long.

In December last year, MIB had issued a directive, asking TV channels to restrict condom ads to the 10 pm-6 am slot. This came following ASCI's initiative, highlighti­ng the need to cap advertisin­g of condom brands to the late night-early morning slot, owing to explicit sexual content, considered unsuitable for children.

ASCI was led in part to take the initiative after multiple complaints against ads for brands such as Mankind Pharma's Manforce condoms, featuring Sunny Leone and Alkem Laboratori­es' Playgard, featuring Bipasha Basu.

While the ads continue to play on television during regular hours, following condom makers moving the Rajasthan High Court, sexual content in them has been lowered in keeping with the sensibilit­ies of families and children, sources said.

For ASCI, the opportunit­y of working with the NCW follows work it has undertaken for multiple bodies, including the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India, AYUSH Ministry and Department of Consumer Affairs in the areas of food, healthcare and allied services. The ad regulator acts as the executive arm for these bodies, taking up complaints made by industry and consumers against advertiser­s for misleading claims, writing to companies to modify the ads.

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