The Asian Age

I&B serves notice to Radio Mirchi

Withdrawn after many call it ‘anti-national’

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, OCT. 29

New Delhi: FM radio station Radio Mirchi has been served a notice by the I&B ministry for airing a campaign titled #MatAaoIndi­a (Don’t Come to India), after the attack on a Swiss couple in Fatehpur Sikri. The radio station has withdrawn the campaign and apologised.

FM radio station Radio Mirchi, which is owned by the Times of India group, has displeased the Smriti Irani-led Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry for airing a campaign titled #MatAaoIndi­a (Don’t Come to India), telling foreign tourists to stay away from the country.

Radio Mirchi aired the campaign after the attack on Swiss tourists in Fatehpur Sikri last week.

The campaign, which was in Hindi, went:

See the sea at Goa, and the tourists being harassed,

See your Russian guest, and her molestatio­n too,

See the splendour of Fatehpur, and the couples being troubled there,

See the respect we have for love, see the splendour of new India

See the morality of death, see the way we insult guests

Coming to India is injurious to health

Guests are not gods. Do not come to India.

The campaign was taken down after a flood of criticism on social media; some users branded the radio station ‘antination­al’ — the new buzzword — and advised followers to “unfollow” the station on Facebook and Twitter.

The tone of the Radio Mirchi #MatAaoIndi­a campaign was in sharp contrast to the previous campaign in which Aamir Khan urged better treatment of foreign tourists.

The Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry said the campaign violated the All-India Radio programme and advertisem­ent code and was “discouragi­ng foreign tourists from visiting India through their broadcast.”

The notice was served on October 27 and the FM station has been given 15 days to respond as to why it should not be penalised.

“It was brought to the ministry’s notice that the radio channel was discouragi­ng foreign tourists from visiting India through their broadcast,” the notice said.

“The content in question is defamatory and violated the AIR (AllIndia Radio) code,” it said.

Radio Mirchi has also been sent a verbatim transcript of the campaign, sources added.

Radio Mirchi has been asked to furnish its reply within 15 days of receiving the notice, failing which the ministry would be constraine­d to initiate action, sources stated.

Radio Mirchi posted an apology on the micro blogging website Twitter.

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