Hindustan Times (Patiala)

PUNJAB TO CENSOR SONGS

- HT Correspond­ent n letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

Punjab minister Navjot Singh Sidhu announced on Saturday that the state government has decided to constitute a Sabhyachaa­r (culture) Commission to check “obscenity” and the “glorificat­ion of drugs and violence” in Punjabi songs.

Punjab’s cultural affairs minister Navjot Singh Sidhu on Saturday announced that the state government has decided to constitute a Punjab Sabhyachaa­r (culture) Commission to check “obscenity and vulgarity”, and the “glorificat­ion of drugs and violence”, in Punjabi songs.

The commission will also have powers to monitor content served through social media, he declared, claiming that Punjab is the first state in India to have such a set-up.

At a press conference for the announceme­nt, Sidhu, a former cricketer who has also worked with a comedy show, said the chief minister will be chairman and the cultural affairs minister (he, for now) the vice-chairman of the panel. For the membership structure and norms, Punjab Arts Council chairperso­n and poet Surjit Patar — who was sitting next to Sidhu — has been tasked with preparing a blueprint in two weeks, said the minister. Patar claimed the members will a “totally apolitical group of intellectu­als”.

The commission will have powers to register FIRs against those who violate a code of conduct to be put in place in the coming days, Sidhu informed, adding, “FIR will be the last resort. The commission will first urge the writers and singers not to promote

POET SURJIT PATAR TO DELIVER BLUEPRINT ON MEMBERSHIP CRITERIA AND OTHER NORMS IN TWO WEEKS

songs that are harmful to the psyche of society and our coming generation­s.”

Besides Patar, Sidhu was accompanie­d by actor and former Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader Gurpreet Singh Ghuggi, singer Pammi Bai, and some noted writers.

Patar, asserting the need for the commission, said “the situation has become such that you cannot watch songs at your house with you children or parents”.

“How Punjabi songs impact our society is for all to see. Despite wide-ranging criticism of singers and writers who are promoting such songs, the trend has not diminished. We have to stop it somewhere, if want to save our culture,” he added.

Sidhu claimed that obscene content in songs becomes an incitement for sexual harassment of women; glorificat­ion of weapons and violence encourages people to commit crimes; and celebratio­n of drugs pushes people into fatal addictions.

Notably, the state police too have announced efforts to urge singers against songs that promote violence and the gangster culture, but not much has been heard about that after an initial set of meetings with some singers.

As for the system at present, the national-level censor board does not cover music albums, though complaints can be made to authoritie­s, including private firms such as Google that owns video-sharing portal YouTube, on case-by-case basis.

 ?? KESHAV SINGH/HT ?? Cultural affairs minister Navjot Singh Sidhu flanked by actor Gurpreet Ghuggi (L) and Punjab Arts Council chairman and poet Surjit Patar at a press conference in Chandigarh on Saturday.
KESHAV SINGH/HT Cultural affairs minister Navjot Singh Sidhu flanked by actor Gurpreet Ghuggi (L) and Punjab Arts Council chairman and poet Surjit Patar at a press conference in Chandigarh on Saturday.

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