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Jaitley
hints at privatisation of NFDC, DFFI and FTII
By MSM Desai
The ministry of information and broadcasting appears to be toying with
the idea of privatising its sick units such as the National Film Development
Corporation, Directorate of Film Festivals and Film and Television Institute
of India, the performances of which are dismal.
This indication was given by I & B Minister Arun Jaitley while talking
aloud about the poor performances of his Ministrys agencies with
producers like Yash Chopra and others at a dinner meeting on June 20 in
Mumbai. The minister commented that these bodies had lost their utility
value considering that private parties were doing far better, despite
their limited resources.
As accused by the NFDC union earlier in its letter to Arun Jaitley, the
NFDC has a liability of Rs 20 crore. Its pact with Doordarshan in showing
films on Doordarshan has also not borne good results. The NFDC has also
failed to bag any awards for the films it has financed. No doubt the NFDC
has a big library of films but they have little commercial value, the
minister reckons.
As regards the DFFI, its performance has been dismal, too.
Earlier, the Janata government had offered to let the film industry take
over the DFFI, but the bureaucrats who run the festivals did not agree
to the idea. DFFI director Malati Sahay has been unable to lend credence
to the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) which has been reduced
to the status of an insignificant festival on the international circuit.
She has been unable to shop for better films and secure the participation
of important film personalities at the recent editions of IFFI, despite
travelling widely abroad and attending several other film festivals. On
the contrary, private festivals held in Mumbai, Calcutta and Thiruvananthapuram
have become big festivals attracting a wider array of recent foreign films
and the participation of film personalities. If the government is willing
to part with the DFFI, film industry may not hesitate to take over the
directorate, and organise the film fests. As it is, the Film Federation
of India, which is a member of the world film producers body, Federation
of International Associations of Film Producers (FIAFPP), has to be consulted
before the festivals are organised.
FTII, Pune, has also been embroiled in several recent controversies. It
has seen several strikes by the students and resulted in a change of leadership
at the helm. The government has been wondering why it should spend as
much as Rs 11 crore for the sake of 40 students. By this time, FTII ought
to have become the best film institute at least in the whole of Asia,
but frequent strikes and change of directors has brought a bad name to
the institute. Meanwhile, many film institutes have sprung up besides
the ones in Bangalore and Chennai, which have been doing quite well over
the years.
The fact that Subhash Ghai announced in New York he that proposes to start
a Rs 200 crore film and television Institute gives credence to the theory
that the film industry may not be averse to investing in FTII, if the
government-owned FTII is privatised.
The film industry may also not hesitate to run the NFDC even if it is
in the red now. It can be made viable if private corporations decide to
take over. It may be recalled that when the government set up the Indian
Motion Picture Export Corporation (IMPEC) in the early 60s, the film industry
personnel had bought its shares. But later, the government developed cold
feet on the issue, and returned the money it had got from the industrys
investors, since it wanted IMPEC to be a 100 per cent government body.
In the early 70s, IMPEC along with the Film Finance Corporation was amalgamated
into the NFDC as a government unit. Initially, the NFDC developed into
a big body with several activities such as setting up a sub-titling unit,
financing theatres, distribution of foreign films, exports of films and
running a film society. But in all these, the NFDCs performance
has been far from satisfactory.
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