Indo-Asian News Service
K.S. Sarma, CEO of the Prasar Bharati Corporation, is here to publicise a global tender for the worldwide distribution of Doordarshan television and All India Radio (AIR) channels.
"I expect a very good response," Sarma told IANS at the end of a tour of
Sarma says the plan is aimed at meeting a long-standing demand for Doordarshan and AIR programmes by the Indian diaspora that currently only has access to private Indian television and radio channels.
According to the Indian government, the diaspora is over 20 million strong and found in almost every part of the world. There are a million ethnic Indians in 11 countries and at least 100,000 in 22 others.
The Prasar Bharati tender comes after an abortive attempt to provide two free Doordarshan channels to the diaspora through a private carrier that Sarma said proved too expensive. The tender covers 49 countries in
Refundable deposits for bids for the television channels range from around $40,000 (for
For Sarma, who took over as CEO three-and-a-half years ago, the bid to reach the global Indian comes after the successful penetration of some of the more remote and inaccessible regions within India - something he felt fell squarely within the mandate of a modern public service broadcaster.
"If we are really a public broadcaster worth our salt, I must reach everyone," Sarma said. He said the Direct-To-Home (DTH) service, providing 33 free channels through set tops and dishes that have to be purchased, had marked a "real revolution" in public service broadcasting, benefiting 20 million households that are in remote areas with no television signal and another 45 million who had no cable access.
"This will change the broadcasting landscape in
According to Sarma, of the estimated 202 million households in