Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

House panel to eye UK report on media ethics

- Zia Haq

NEW DELHI: A cross-party parliament­ary committee will look into Britain’s landmark Leveson Inquiry report on the “culture, practices and ethics of the press” on Monday for “takeaways” that could be applied to India on issues ranging from regulation to media ownership.

Justice Leveson’s recommenda­tions had called for a new law to back an “independen­t regulatory body” with real teeth after probing Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World, whose hacking of a murdered schoolgirl’s phone became a major scandal in 2012.

The consultati­ve committee for the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry would discuss the report for the first time, although a standing committee had made a reference about it earlier, a senior official said.

While “regulation” alone wouldn’t be the focus, the report

THE MEDIA IN INDIA IS LARGELY ‘SELF REGULATORY’, THEY HAVE THEIR OWN OVERSIGHT PANELS

could hold lessons for the Indian media landscape on complex issues of paid news, presspolit­ician relationsh­ip, media and the police, and cross-media proprietor­ship, the official said.

Paid news is described as content that has been sponsored or paid for by a client, but not disclosed as such to readers.

Leveson’s 2,000-page report, damning for much of the British press, for example, noted that press behaviour often “wreaked havoc” on the lives of ordinary people. In the Indian context, reporting of terror and crime cases and its impact on families of the accused could be studied in the light of Leveson’s findings.

India has adopted a largely “self-regulatory approach”, which means the media have their own oversight panels.

In its May 2013 report, a parliament­ary standing committee had sought to make a case for a statutory regulator for both print and electronic media.

The committee had called on the I&B ministry and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India to take “concerted, comprehens­ive and swift action” on cross-media ownership, with appropriat­e rules to restrict cross-holdings.

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