Madras HC pushes digitisation deadline to 5 November in Chennai

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Madras HC pushes digitisation deadline to 5 November in Chennai

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: The Madras High Court on Wednesday pushed the deadline for implementation of digitisation in Chennai to Monday, 5 November.

Justice Paul Vasanthkumar said the government itself has admitted that Chennai had achieved less than 70 per cent target in installation of digital set top boxes (STBs).

The order came on a petition by Chennai Metro Cable Operators Association (CMCOA) General Secretary M R Srinivasan.


The petitioner's counsel V P Gopalan argued that there were four million TV households in Chennai but STBs had been installed in just 200,000 homes, while another 700,000 were covered by direct-to-home platforms.

The Court also heard counsel for the Information & Broadcasting Ministry who said Chennai had achieved 62 per cent Cable TV digitization and that the figure goes up to 86 per cent on inclusion of direct-to-home (DTH).

The government has set 1 November as the deadline for compulsory switchover to digital delivery of television channels in the four metros of Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata.

The Bombay High Court too is hearing arguments on petitions filed by local cable operators for extension of the digitisation deadline in Mumbai.



Talking to Indiantelevision.com from Chennai, Srinivasan said CMCOA will ask for extension of the deadline by at least three months.

CMCOA argument is that the actual number of homes seeded with STBs is only 200,000 out of 4 million television homes and if the digitisation deadline stands a lot of television sets will go blank.

Srinivasan also said the government will have to direct the Multi System Operators (MSOs) to procure enough boxes and monitor the digitisation process on a weekly basis to ensure that the digitisation target is met.

The state-owned Arasu Corporation, he said, was not present in Chennai and is yet to receive DAS licence which also added to the delay. Furthermore, other MSOs (Kal Cable and Sun Cable Vision) in Chennai are offering STBs only to cable operators who are paying in advance as per requirement.​

:angry:angry:angry:angry
 
Madras HC extends digitization deadline till 5 Nov in Chennai

Chennai: Cable TV operators and consumers in Chennai received a five-day respite at the last minute on Wednesday when the Madras high court extended the deadline for digitization of television signals in the southern city.
Their counterparts in Mumbai had no such luck. The Bombay high court declined to extend Wednesday’s deadline for the switch to a digital addressable system (DAS), meaning a TV blackout for households that haven’t installed set-top boxes (STBs) to receive digital signals.


Wednesday was the last day for cable operators in four metropolitan cities—Chennai, Kolkata, New Delhi and Mumbai—to implement the central government’s digitization order.
In Chennai, heavy rain and strong winds kept people indoors on Wednesday, preventing any scramble for set-top boxes, as cyclone Nilam approached.
Schools and colleges have been shut in Tamil Nadu’s capital for the past two days because of incessant rains.
Chennai cable operators filed a case in the Madras high court for an extension of the 31 October deadline because of the non-availability of set-top boxes.
Madras high court judge Paul Vasantha Kumar, in an interim order on Wednesday, directed the information and broadcasting ministry to extend the digitization deadline in Chennai till 5 November, said J. Srinivasa Mohan, counsel for the cable operators.
“In a hearing today, the court has put on hold the digitization till the next hearing,” said M.R. Srinivasan, general secretary of the Chennai Metro Cable TV Operators Association (CMCOA).
The group has 1,800 cable operators under its fold.
“The next hearing is on 5 November,” Srinivasan said. “This comes as a relief to us.”
Television is the largest component of the southern media and entertainment industry, accounting for about 58% of the Rs.21,190 crore industry, according to a recent report by consultancy Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India Pvt. Ltd and industry lobby Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.
In Mumbai, a division bench of the Bombay high court, comprising justices D.Y. Chandrachud and R.G. Ketkar, refused to grant any relief to cable TV operators.
“In June, you knew you have time till October. What have you done till today?” the judges, who were hearing a petition filed by Bhawani Rajesh Cable and Digitech, asked.

The earlier deadline of June had been extended until 31 October after the cable operators sought time to install set-top boxes, which have to be imported.
“A certain degree of inconvenience is inevitable in the enforcement of any deadline. The Union ministry has taken this decision to cut off cable network (in the absence of STBs) with a view to provide quality service to consumers,” judge Chandrachud said.
The court, however, asked the Union government to consider giving some relief to viewers during the Diwali festival in November.
“We do not want people’s Diwali blacked out. Television these days has become the cheapest and basic source of entertainment for the average middle-class family. We are concerned about the consumers and not the operators,” Chandrachud said.

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Source: Madras HC extends digitization deadline till 5 Nov in Chennai - Livemint
 
Merged double post with exsiting thread.
 
Madaras HC pushes digitisation deadline to 5 November in Chennai. But In Chennai most of the places, cable was disconnected. Any one knows behind what's happening?
 
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