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    You are at:Home » Blog » Leela Samson criticises I&B ministry for censor board problems including bribery allegations: Free board from ministry control
    In The Media

    Leela Samson criticises I&B ministry for censor board problems including bribery allegations: Free board from ministry control

    Nalin MehtaBy Nalin MehtaAugust 21, 2014Updated:April 14, 2015No Comments2 Mins Read
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    The arrest of Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) CEO Rakesh Kumar on charges of bribery is at one level a case of alleged personal dishonesty. But at a deeper level, as chairperson Leela Samson has argued, it is another reminder of India’s flawed system of film censorship. This must now end. CBFC is a statutory body under the information and broadcasting ministry, its now-arrested CEO an Indian Railways officer. What pray does expertise in railways have anything to do with films? Unless, you are looking to appoint any government officer, with whatever expertise, under the misguided notion that only government knows best.

    Tight-fisted government control over funding and appointments means that even independent-minded artists like chairperson Leela Samson end up as just figureheads, with little say on operations and appointments. Samson has been quoted in the past, saying that 90% of her colleagues are “uneducated” and an “embarrassment”, many with political links. Further, CBFC remains cloaked in opaqueness. It hasn’t published its annual report online since 2011. And for a body that certifies 13,500 films yearly, it is short-staffed. Even Samson’s own term has expired, with no replacement.

    Film censorship in other democracies is not controlled by government. Australia’s film classification board is an independent statutory body, answerable only to Parliament and comprising full-time multi-sector representatives. Britain’s equivalent is an independent self-funded body, also accountable only to Parliament and the public. The Motion Pictures Association of America is more industry-oriented, essentially run by the film industry itself. Overall control of film censorship by an opaque government ministry is a relic of British India when films were seen to be too socially volatile to be left outside the purview of government. It is time to scrap the old system and create an independent self-funded body more in tune with the times.

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    Censor Board films Ministry of Information and Broadcasting
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    Nalin Mehta is Managing Editor, Moneycontrol, Chief AI Officer - Editorial Operations, Network18 and Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. He is an award-winning Indian journalist, political scientist and author who has held senior leadership positions in major media companies and educational institutions; served as an international civil servant with the UN and the Global Fund in Geneva, Switzerland; taught and held research positions at universities and institutions in Australia (La Trobe University, ANU), Singapore (NUS), Switzerland (International Olympic Museum) and India (Shiv Nadar University, IIM Bangalore). Most recently, he has been Dean and Professor at School of Modern Media, UPES University. He has previously been Group Consulting Editor, Network18; Executive Editor, The Times of India-Online, Managing Editor, India Today (TV channel) and Consulting Editor, The Times of India. Mehta is the author of several best-selling and critically acclaimed books, including The New BJP: Modi and the Making of the World’s Largest Political Party (hailed as a ‘seminal’ work, No. 1 on Amazon’s bestseller lists for 26 consecutive weeks in 2022, and republished worldwide in several languages); India’s Techade: Digital Revolution and Change in the World’s Largest Democracy, India on Television (Asian Publishing Award for Best Book on Asian Media, 2009), Behind a Billion Screens (Longlisted as Business Book of the Year, Tata Literature Live, 2015) and Dreams of a Billion (2022 Ekamra Sports Book of the Year Award, co-authored). His edited books include Gujarat Beyond Gandhi (co-editor), Television in India and The Changing Face of Cricket (co-editor). Mehta is a DFID-Commonwealth scholar with a Ph.D in Political Science from Trobe University, Melbourne; M.A. International Relations from University of East Anglia, UK; and B.A. Journalism (Honours) from University of Delhi.

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    Nalin Mehta is Managing Editor, Moneycontrol, Chief AI Officer - Editorial Operations, Network18 and Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. He is an award-winning Indian journalist, political scientist and author who has held senior leadership positions in major media companies and educational institutions; served as an international civil servant with the UN and the Global Fund in Geneva, Switzerland; taught and held research positions at universities and institutions in Australia (La Trobe University, ANU), Singapore (NUS), Switzerland (International Olympic Museum) and India (Shiv Nadar University, IIM Bangalore).

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