Business Standard

11 killed, 36 hurt in TN fireworks factory explosion

PM, CM condole deaths; announce ex-gratia of ~2 lakh & ~3 lakh, each

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA Virudhunag­ar, 12 February

At least 11 workers were killed and 36 injured when an explosion ripped through a fireworks factory near Sattur in this southern district in Tamil Nadu on Friday, Police said. The explosion occurred when some chemicals were being mixed to produce fireworks at the unit in Acchankula­m village, they said, adding the injured had been hospitalis­ed.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister K Palaniswam­i, Governor Banwarilal Purohit and Congress MP Rahul Gandhi were among those who condoled the deaths.

Modi and Palaniswam­i announced an ex-gratia of ~2 lakh and ~3 lakh each to the kin of the deceased from the Prime Minister's National Relief Fund and the Chief Minister's Public Relief Fund respective­ly. The factory building was damaged badly under the impact of the explosion and many suffered burns.

Palaniswam­i, in a statement, said all the 11 workers were killed on the spot and that he has ordered a probe into the incident, while assuring due legal action.

For online curated content (OCC) providers, who broadcast their content over the internet, the dream run of creating programmin­g without any regulation is now over.

In the first week of February, Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng (I&B) minister Prakash Javadekar announced that the government will soon come out with regulation for these players. On Thursday, 17 OCC operators quickly signed on the dotted line for a voluntary code after over two years of contentiou­s debate. What they accepted was a toolkit for the industry, which they have presented to the I&B ministry for approval. The big boys who endorsed the code include Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney Hotstar, Voot, Sony Liv, Zee 5, MX Player and Altbalaji.

The code, finalised by the Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India (IAMAI), has suggested a two-stage grievance and complaint redress structure. The first stage will involve an internal panel comprising company executives. If dissatisfi­ed, the complainan­t could escalate it to an advisory body to be also set up by the OCC that will have three members, one of whom could be selected from an empanelled group of independen­t members.

Elaboratin­g on the rules, Gourav Rakshit, co-chair of the digital entertainm­ent committee of IAMAI, said, “We have incorporat­ed many of the suggestion­s from the government and expect more OCC players (there are 40 of them) to join in.”

But will this code for self-regulation pass government muster? Most countries are grappling with the same challenges of regulating OCCS and have varying models. In Singapore, for instance, the government’s media regulatory body has issued a detailed code for OTT platforms. OTT players have no say. In Australia, it is co-regulated with the Australian Classifica­tion Board classifyin­g both online and offline content (only Netflix has been allowed to self-classify its content using its own tools). In the UK, too, the British Board of Film Certificat­ion has a partnershi­p with Netflix, again allowing the streaming giant to set its own ratings for its programmes.

“We must allow the OCC sector, which is in its infancy, to grow. Let them first self-regulate; if it does not work, regulation may be considered,” said Gowree Gokhale, senior leader, IP, technology, media and entertainm­ent practice, Nishith Desai Associates. “We should have a balanced approach between creative freedom and regulation.”

But OCC players admit that they have been a divided house and that is why the government is muscling in. In November 2020, a government notificati­on made it clear the oversight on OCC platforms would be with the I&B ministry. Earlier, there was confusion over whether they fall in the ambit of the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology or not.

Also, there has been growing complaints about the content shown by some OCC players on the justificat­ion of “creative freedom”, especially those which were not paywalled. The matter came to a head recently after Amazon Prime’s web series Tandav was caught in a controvers­y over allegation­s of hurting religious sentiments. The director was forced to remove some scenes and issued an unconditio­nal apology after discussion­s with the I&B ministry. Some OCC players say Amazon Prime should have gone to court, since apologisin­g has emboldened the Centre to interfere in content creation.

Yet OCC players have taken inordinate­ly

long to come to a consensus. In January 2019, a code of conduct was mooted by nine OCC players taking best practices from various countries. The government was not interested. In February 2020 five players — Hotstar Disney, Voot, Sony Liv, Eros Now and Reliance Jio — proposed a two-tier complaint redress mechanism that would include an

internal redress committee and a Digital Content Complaints panel for appeal, to be set up under former high court judge Justice A P Shah. It was akin to what the Indian Broadcasti­ng Federation has undertaken by setting up an independen­t redress mechanism in the Broadcasti­ng Content Complaint Council.

Insiders say the other big players had rejected the two-tier plan. “As three of the five members were also broadcaste­rs, the global OCC players feared we have a vested interest in foisting the same legacy regulation on everyone and scuttling their freedom on content. They did not want any regulation or did not understand the Indian realities,” said a senior executive of a global OCC. Some of them objected to former judges heading such panels fearing it would imply government interferen­ce through the backdoor.

A third attempt at self-regulation was made in September 2020 by IAMAI, but the government rejected it as it lacked a third-party monitoring and redress mechanism, a defined code of ethics and clarity on what content will be prohibited.

The fear among many OCCS is that the compromise­d fourth attempt might again be rejected, too, and the government may move towards imposing its rules. Part of the reservatio­n is over the fact that even in the new toolkit, the second stage of redress does not envisage an industry-led independen­t advisory body under the aegis of IAMAI. The independen­t members in the advisory committee would be appointed by the company so there is a question of transparen­cy.

Yet some OCC players have mooted the idea that IAMAI should set up a paid advisors’ panel from which the OCCS will have to draw their independen­t members as well as contribute to their cost. Rakshit says it is a proposal under considerat­ion. But some internatio­nal players are uncomforta­ble with an industry body undertakin­g peer review of its content. As a result, some OCC players fear that they could be licensed.

Overall, content producers are backing light regulation. Siddharth Roy Kapoor, president of Producers Guild of India, said, “What is required is soft-touch regulation of content so that creativity is not stifled. It is because of this that we have seen so much of meaningful content from India.”

The question is whether the government will see it that way.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned that his country is ready for a break in ties with the European Union if the bloc imposes sanctions that damage Russia’s economy.

“We’re ready for that,” Lavrov said in an interview on the Solovyev Live Youtube channel on Friday. “If we see again, as has happened many times before, that sanctions are imposed that pose risks for our economy, including in the most sensitive areas.”

Russia’s top diplomat added: “We don’t want to isolate ourselves from peaceful life but we have to be ready for that. If you want peace you

have to prepare for war.”

The 27-member EU is working on a proposal to sanction Russia over the imprisonme­nt of opposition leader Alexey Navalny, according to two people familiar with the discussion­s.

Navalny, who suffered a near-fatal nerve-agent attack he and Western government­s blamed on Russia’s secret services, was sentenced to 2 years and 8 months on February 2 for violating the probation terms of an earlier suspended fraud conviction.

Tensions between Moscow and Brussels are rising following EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell’s visit to the Russian capital last week, when Lavrov used a joint press conference to disparage the bloc as an unreliable partner. Russia simultaneo­usly announced the expulsion of three diplomats from Poland, Germany and Sweden for their “recorded participat­ion” in protests against Navalny’s imprisonme­nt. The EU countries rejected the accusation and reciprocat­ed in kind.

Navalny’s allies have urged the EU, UK and US to sanction 35 top Russian officials and business figures close to the Kremlin.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ??
PHOTO: PTI
 ??  ?? Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov

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