Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Mechanism to regulate electronic media

- BY SANDUN A JAYASEKERA

A permanent regulatory mechanism will be set up to monitor the Electronic Media soon after the Right to Informatio­n Bill is passed in Parliament, Mass Media and Parliament­ary Affairs Deputy Minister Karunaratn­e Paranavith­ana said yesterday.

He told the weekly news briefing that though there was a number of monitoring bodies and self -censorship for the print media, the electronic media did not have such a mechanism and that the electronic media functions amid several complaints.

Admitting that media culture, ethics and discipline is at the lowest level in respect of TV stations and FM radio, the minister said guidelines for the electronic media were long overdue.

Responding to a journalist he said, FM radio listeners and TV viewers are frustrated when tele-dramas telecast during the prime time runs for less than 12 minutes while rest of the time is occupied by advertisem­ents. The FM radio stations violate the rights of respected and popular singers by airing extremely low quality re-mix programmes contributi­ng to the degenerati­on and erosion of Sinhala music, lyrics and songs.

The Right to Informatio­n Bill is expected to be presented for the second and third reading next Thursday and is likely to be passed unanimousl­y.

“The enactment of the Right to Informatio­n Bill is a victory for the Unity Government. The 2002 - 2004 UNP government of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe attempted to introduce a RTI but failed and then Speaker Karu Jayasuriya presented it as a Private Member’s Bill and failed. President Mahinda Rajapaksa said the Right to Informatio­n Bill was unnecessar­y and that he was there to provide any informatio­n,” the deputy minister said.

He said the ‘Center for Law and Democracy’ in Canada had highly commended the government for the introducti­on of the Right to Informatio­n Bill and described it as the 7th best Bill in the world to protect media freedom, right to informatio­n and democracy.

The Right to Informatio­n Bill is expected to be presented for the second and third reading next Thursday and is likely to be passed unanimousl­y

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