CENSORSHIP :Civil Services Mentor Magazine: JUNE - 2017
::CENSORSHIP::
History has never seen a better example of role of censorship and propoganda than the role of Joseph Goebbels. Joseph Goebbels served as minister of propaganda for the Nazi German government and is generally held responsible for presenting a favorable image of the Nazi regime to the Germans. His control of the propaganda machine stretched over all media of the time-newspapers, radio, films, theater, literature, music and the arts-and he became a figure to be feared, especially by Jews, who were now in the crosshairs of the Nazi Party. Propoganda and censorship are two sides of a same coin. Anyone, who wants to spread his propoganda, needs control over the censorship instituions. Propoganda and censorship both curb the freedom of expression. Propoganda curbs freedom of expression indirectly via not letting people get the correct information, while censorship curbs it directly. A classic example of censorship in India is the Central Board of Film Certification or Censor Board, which comes under the purview of Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. The Board regularly orders, directors to remove anything it deems offensive or subjects considered to be politically subversive. The Central Board of Film Certification (often referred to as the Censor Board) is one such institutions which has censorship authority over films. It has duty of regulating the public exhibition of films. Films can be publicly exhibited in India only after they are certified by the Board, including films shown on television. Pahlaj nihlani is the current director of The Central Board of Film Certification.
The freedom of speech is a fundamental right guaranteed under the Constitution of India. It has been given the highest level of protection, this was the level of importance given by the constitution makers to freedom of expression. However constituion makers believed that absolute freedom of expression can lead to chaotic and disintegrating conditions in country as diverse as India. Constitution itself provides the ways through which it can be curbed. Freddom of expression can be suppressed if it is considered objectionable, harmful, or necessary to maintain communal harmony.
Censor board has to work with in the limitation mentioned in the
constitution and the cinematography act through which it derives its powers.
However in various past cases The Central Board of Film Certification (or Censor
Board) has gone beyond their scope. At the first place as the Bombay High court
said it is not a board for censoring, it is only a authority for certification
of movies in various categories like U, A, U/A etc. There are various examples
which show that The Central Board of Film Certification is excedding its
authority. Examples like removing the kissing scene from James bond movie or the
recent example of UDTA Punjab where it
came up with 90 odd cuts are clearly restricting the peoples right. These
incidents put doubt over the motive and intentions over the The Central Board of
Film Certification and its director. The Central Board of Film Certification
should not be an instituion to propogate the ideologyof government of the day.
This is a big problem and The Central Board of Film Certification should understand the mandate given to it. However a far bigger censorship has been imposed by the people on themselfs or others. There are lot of cases where ater getting certificate from The Central Board of Film Certification, films got into trouble. Examples like kissing scene in Dhoom 2 which ended in people burning its movie posters, protest from some portion of the Muslim Community against Vishwaroopam which forced to delete some important scenes from the movie before releasing the same. Similarly protest against PK by Hindu maha sabha and against Da vinci code by some of the Christian community members is a big jolt to freedom of expression.
The Constitution of India guarantees freedom of speech and expression with certain restrictions such as that of morality, decency, public order etc. Further, the Indian Penal Code allows cramping free speech on grounds of outraging religious feelings, making statements creating or promoting enmity, hatred or ill-will between classes on grounds of religion, caste, language or race. The Information Act, 2000 aims to punish people who send offensive messages online but is often used to target dissident and even posts on social media.
The Committee chaired by Shri Shyam Benegal submitted major part of their recommendation to Hon'ble Union Minister of Information & Broadcasting, Shri Arun Jaitley this evening. Following are the major highlights of the report -
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CBFC should only be a film certification body whose scope should be restricted to categorizing the suitability of the film to audience groups on the basis of age and maturity except in the following instances to refuse certification
When a film contains anything that contravenes the
provisions of Section 5B (1) of the Cinematograph Act, 1952. Section 5B (1) of
the Cinematograph Act, 1952- (A film shall not be certified for public
exhibition if, in the opinion of the authority competent to grant the
certificate, the film or any part of it is against the interests of 19 [the
sovereignty and integrity of India] the security of the State, friendly
relations with foreign States, public
order, decency or morality, or involves defamation or contempt of court or is
likely to incite the commission of any offence.)
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When content in a film crosses the ceiling laid down in the highest category of certification.
The functions of the Board shall be confined to the duties defined in the
existing CBFC rules, which inter alia include an annual review of CBFC work,
submission of annual report to the government, review of public
reactions to films, and periodic recommendations for revision of guidelines.
The Central Board of Film Certification (often referred to as
the Censor Board) is a statutory censorship and classification body under the
Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. It is tasked with
"regulating the public exhibition of films under the provisions of the
Cinematograph Act 1952". It assigns certifications to films only . Films can be
publicly exhibited in India only after they are certified by the Board,
including films shown on television. The CBFC India is considered to be one of
the most powerful film Censor Boards in the world due to its strict ways of
functioning. I believe that the role of the CBFC should be to facilitate good
cinema. Good cinema is not necessarily comfortable, entertaining or has happy
endings. But film-makers would like to break from stereotypes and make stronger
statements. The CBFC exists because cinema exists, and must work with the
industry to complete the formalities of certification. Censorship is certainly
not its job.
Free expression is vital to humanity and the foundation of a
free society. At the most basic level, without free expression ideas cannot be
tested. Free speech creates the space for the exchange of ideas in the arts,
literature, religion, academia, politics and science, and is essential for other
rights such as freedom of conscience and freedom of assembly. Without this,
individuals can't make informed decisions and fully participate in society. In
democracies, free speech may on the whole be protected, but through unfair media
regulation, archaic defamation laws or over-broad police powers, the chill on
free speech continues. While censorship may take different forms, and be
proposed for different reasons, the importance of protecting free expression as
a universal value for the benefit of humanity remains.