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Anti-tobacco rules relaxed in film and TV industry

In a major respite to film and TV industry, the government has relaxed anti-tobacco regulations for them, including on mandatory disclaimers by actors about ill-effects of tobacco during screening of their films, and has done away with a clause on censor certification.

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In a major respite to film and TV industry, the government has relaxed anti-tobacco regulations for them, including on mandatory disclaimers by actors about ill-effects of tobacco during screening of their films, and has done away with a clause on censor certification.

The amendment to the October 27, 2011 notification of the Health Ministry comes in the wake of Union Information and Broadcasting Ministry locking horns with the Health Ministry over its implementation, citing operational problems after objections were raised by filmmakers, TV producers and actors.

The new notification approved by the Health Ministry and to be enforced from October 2 drops the earlier condition which required Central Board of Film Certification to review films based on tobacco display and give U/A certificate to the ones that promote use of various forms of tobacco.

"Earlier the Censor Board had been asked to give U/A certification on the basis of tobacco use. Now tobacco use is not a condition for grant of U/A certificate. That requirement has been removed," a Health Ministry official said.

On the issue of disclaimers, he said that "the producers were arguing that it would be difficult to get actors to read out disclaimers especially in case of foreign films. So we have dropped that condition but disclaimers remain in other forms."

The notification now says that the Ministry of Health will produce an audio visual disclaimer and send it to the Censor Board for further implementation by filmmakers in cases where the actors are unavailable for the disclaimer.

"Every film and TV producer would have to show this disclaimer of 20 seconds at the start and middle of the programme or film. The only relaxation to the industry is that actors need not say disclaimers. We will produce audio-visual disclaimers and send them to Censor Board for use," he said.

Anti-tobacco health spots of minimum 30 seconds would also have to be shown in the beginning and middle of the film or a TV programme.

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