Age of bans on media is over: Arun Jaitley
Age of bans on media is over: Arun Jaitley
Delivering the Sardar Patel lecture organised by All India Radio (AIR) in the national capital, Jaitley, who is also the Finance Minister, noted that while the right to freedom of expression has expanded in India through successive judicial verdicts and technological advances, its misuse continues to happen.

New Delhi: Information and Broadcasting Minister Arun Jaitley on Monday said the "age of bans" on the media is over, observing that it is "literally impossible" to implement them.

Delivering the Sardar Patel lecture organised by All India Radio (AIR) in the national capital, Jaitley, who is also the Finance Minister, noted that while the right to freedom of expression has expanded in India through successive judicial verdicts and technological advances, its misuse continues to happen.

"Many believe, and I am one of those who do believe, that the age of bans is now over. It is literally impossible if not very difficult to implement them," he said. "Should the state step in? As far as possible, no," he said.

The minister noted that while print media and to a large extent electronic media adopt discretions in their content, social media completely lacks such a mechanism. He pointed out that makers of the Constitution rightly held that freedom of speech and expression is not absolute and subject to reasonable restrictions which were specifically defined.

"In a society where because of multi-religious, multi-cultural reasons there are sensitivities, what do we do if somebody crosses the Lakshman Rekha itself? What would the Indian society have done if instead of the Danish cartoonist, it would have been an Indian cartoonist?

"And therefore we have criminal laws in provision but then in extreme cases, very reluctantly so, some power of restraint in larger interest so that it doesn't disturb public order, and that is where those 1950s restrictions imposed in Article 19(2) itself will have an important role to play," he said.

Jaitley said that in a changing media landscape, with the arrival of electronic media, news became more sensational. "News was what Television cameras could capture. What cameras can't capture won't be news. A major Africa summit will be some news, but a young girl returning home from Pakistan would be big news because the Television captures it differently," he added.

He said that there is now a difference between actual news and channel driven news.

"As the marketeers of news express their right to free speech, the viewer or the reader's right to information and knowledge itself is also getting impacted," he said. Speaking about social media, he said while citizens have got a voice, it is an unregulated medium and there is also a large amount of false, defamatory and also damaging content.

The minister said that in this situation, we have to rely on a sense of fairness of those who participate on social media.

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