• Dhaka Sun, 28 APRIL 2024,
logo

Separate broadcasting policy and law for television: Info Minister

Rtv online report

  08 Feb 2019, 00:00

Information Minister Dr. Hasan Mahmud has said that the much discussed broadcasting policy and law will be formulated separately.

He said this at the conference of Broadcast Journalist Center (BJC) at Dhaka University’s TSC on Friday.

Making a comment that advertisements made by foreign artists are harming the television journalism, the minister said, our artists are creating many heart touching and ageless advertisement. But recently it is seen that advertisements are being made by second grade foreign artists. It is being displayed in Bangladesh and India. For this reason this sector is being affected overall.

Hasan Mahmud said, cable operators of the country are showing foreign channels through downlink. Showing foreign channels is not a crime. But broadcasting advertisement in foreign channels without government approval and by not giving tax is a punishable crime. Those who do this are violating the law. I hope they would refrain from this activity before the government applies the law strictly.

In the program three were honored for their role to establish the BJC. After that the key discussion began moderated by ATM News head of news Munni Saha. Apart from the Information Minister in the discussion former cultural affairs minister Asaduzzaman Nur, director general of PIB Shah Alamgir, Ekattor Television chief executive officer Mozammel haque Babu, Bangladesh Protidin editor Noyeem Nizam and GTV chief editor Syed Ishtiaq Reza delivered speeches.

Mentionable, Masranga Television news editor Rezwanul Haque was elected chairman and Ekattor Television head of news Shakil Ahmed was elected as member secretary for the organization.

AH

Comments

  • Most Viewed News Of Bangladesh
Read More
EU elections: What have lawmakers achieved since 2019?
Lawmakers urge Biden to call out more Chinese biotech firms
Florida passes law restricting teen social media access
EU probes Apple, Google, Meta under new digital law