Mumbai:
The appellate tribunal for broadcasting services,
TDSAT, has asked the Telecom Regulatory Authority
of India (TRAI), the sector regulator, to consider
the multi-system operators' (MSOs) demand for greater
share in revenues under the conditional access system
(CAS) for cable TV channels.
Large
cable operators, called multi-system operators, have
been demanding a share in the Rs77 charged for free-to-air
channels while, under CAS regime, the fee paid by
cable viewers in notified areas of Delhi, Mumbai,
Kolkata and Chennai goes to local cable operators.
SitiCable,
one of the country's biggest MSOs, had challenged
TRAI's August 24, 2006, notification that allowed
local / area cable operators to retain all basic-tier
service fee collected from the customer.
TDSAT,
which was hearing a petition, sent the matter back
to TRAI for a re-look and gave the regulator six weeks'
time to act.
"The
issue, in our view, is of great importance and (holds)
wide repercussions for MSOs and cable operators...
keeping all the aspects in consideration, we think
that TRAI should give a hearing to the concerned parties
before arriving at a decision on the issue,"
the TDSAT bench headed by chairman Justice Arun Kumar
said.
"We
feel that TRAI would be in a right position to do
so. Let TRAI take a decision on this," Kumar
said, adding that all stakeholders "should cooperate
with TRAI" as no cable operator has
come forward on the issue so far.
TRAI, however, allowed 45 per cent revenue generated
by the pay channels to broadcaster, 30 per cent to
MSOs and the rest 25 per cent to the local / area
cable operator.
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