The Telecommunications Authority of T&T (TATT) hopes to finalise consultations on the draft broadcast code and present it to Minister of Science and Technology Dr Rupert Griffith by June 30. He is the authority's line minister.TATT's CEO Cris Seecharan, in a telephone interview yesterday after the authority's workshop on IPV6 (Internet Protocol Version 6) at its office in Barataria, said it was in its final consultation on the matter and comments were to be submitted to it by May 10.
After the final consultation, Seecharan said, the authority would collate the information, which should take about two months, and then the code would be sent to Griffith.He added that the code had been published on the authority's Web site for comments from the general public and relevant stakeholders. Slight changes had been made to it after consultations approximately a month ago with the T&T Publishers and Broadcasters Association, he added.
The process of drafting a broadcast code began in 2008 and a draft was crafted in 2009. Three consultations were held before it was drafted. The process stalled when the PNM government left office. In 2011, TATT was asked by the People's Partnership Government to revisit the document. Civil groups and NGOs, such as Fixin' T&T, called last year for it to be revisited and implemented after graphic images of former West Indies cricketer Runako Morton's body were broadcast.
Seecharan said the authority hoped to see the code getting to Cabinet and Parliament by year's end.