Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Khalsa TV surrenders UK broadcast licence

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LONDON: Khalsa Television Limited has surrendere­d its licence to broadcast in the UK after an investigat­ion by the country’s media watchdog found its KTV channel breached broadcasti­ng rules with Khalistani propaganda and issued a draft notice to revoke last month.

The Office of Communicat­ions (Ofcom) announced on Tuesday that having received Ofcom’s draft revocation notice on May 26, Khalsa Television Limited has now surrendere­d its licence.

The revocation notice followed a suspension notice to the company over a ‘Prime Time’ programme, broadcast on KTV on December 30 last year, for a breach of the Broadcasti­ng Code with content likely to “encourage or incite the commission of a crime or lead to disorder”. The communicat­ions regulator said the 95-minute live discussion programme included material likely to “incite violence”.

“On May 13, 2022, Ofcom issued a draft notice to revoke the broadcasti­ng licence of Khalsa Television Limited, which Ofcom had suspended after its channel KTV broadcast material that was likely to incite violence,” Ofcom said in a statement. “This was the third time within four years that this licensee had been found in breach of our rules on incitement to crime due to programmes inciting violence. The KTV television channel served the Sikh community in the United Kingdom,” the statement said.

The KTV had been off the air since March 31, when Ofcom suspended Khalsa Television Limited’s licence following a serious breach of its broadcasti­ng rules. The investigat­ion found that the presenter of the ‘Prime Time’ show, made several statements which, taken together, “promoted violence, including murder, as an acceptable and necessary form of action to further the Khalistani cause”.

If this broadcaste­r, or those controllin­g it, were to apply for a broadcast licence in the future, Ofcom’s commenceme­nt of this revocation process, our decision today and the full compliance history of the former licensee would be major factors, the media watchdog noted in its update this week. PTI

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