This isn't the first time Jayalalithaa has made a bid to nationalise cable operations in Tamil Nadu. In her earlier tenure as Chief Minister (2001-06), she had tried to take over MSOs through an Ordinance. But Governor Barnala didn't give his assent. Political dynamics were different then: the DMK was a critical ally of the UPA government and there were no apparent rifts between the Karunanidhi family and the Marans (more on that later).
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The second, and more likely, possibility is of the AIADMK government bringing in legislation—as earlier—to take over the MSOs and, perhaps, amalgamate them with Arasu. Can the state take over the operations of private players? Apparently, yes. "The state government can 'nationalise' MSOs by passing a law to that effect," says leading Supreme Court advocate Prashant Bhushan. "Since the right to property has been abolished as a fundamental right, it can be done." But while it could be legally tenable to take over the MSOs through a law, Supreme Court advocate Aman Sinha says it still will have to stand judicial scrutiny in terms of freedom of a person to trade or conduct business. "Everything will depend on what the provisions of any proposed Bill are," says Sinha.
At The Receiving End: Dayanidhi Maran and Kalanithi Maran
Jaya Support Group
Interestingly, motives aside, Jayalalithaa's cable nationalisation move seems to be gaining widespread support. "The move is absolutely necessary to save the last mile cable operator in Tamil Nadu," says Roop Sharma, President of Cable Operators Federation of India (Cofi). "We welcome the move," says P Shakilan, president of Tamizhaga Cable TV Operators. SCV has a dominant position in Chennai, Madurai, Coimbatore, Trichy, Thanjavur, Thirunelveli, and most MSOs in other districts are supposedly DMK supporters. There have been allegations all along against SCV of unfair play to stifle competitors, both big and small. From cutting cables of rival operators to not providing the Sun bouquet of channels, the list of complaints has been long.
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Communicate With Vote Bank
Industry observers point to a simple reason why the State may want to control cable TV. There's nothing to beat TV when it comes to mass communication. "While only a literate person can read a newspaper, entire families watch TV whether literate or not," agrees Sharma. And in Tamil Nadu, the DMK has been able to access the media and entertainment space in Tamil Nadu very easily through the SCV and the Sun Group. Which also explains why the party always negotiated for the Information Technology and Telecom portfolio in the UPA government. Indeed, Dayanadhi's appointment as Telecom Minister (2004-07) was seen as a strong case of conflict of interests, notwithstanding his claims of holding no stake in his elder brother's media empire. After all, the policies he made could impact the Sun Group.
Those grey areas are showing up now. It's emerged in the ongoing 2G scam probe by CBI that Dayanidhi allegedly coerced serial investor S Sivasankaran to sell his stake in Aircel to Malaysia-based Maxis. Aircel had been awarded more than a dozen telecom licences. Maxis later invested about Rs 600 crore in Sun TV. And according to the Justice Shivaraj Patil panel, which looked into procedures followed for allocation of licences and spectrum between 2001 and 2009, in 2004 Maran's office delayed licences to Dishnet Wireless (now Aircel) by raising queries that were "vague" and "irrelevant". Dayanidhi, though, has denied any suggestion of quid pro quo. He was removed from the telecom ministry in 2007 after a fallout with the DMK first family. He's now the Union Textiles Minister, a position from which Jayalalithaa has been demanding his ouster; with this latest disclosure, she may just get her wish.
More about Maran
It's no secret that the octogenarian Karunanidhi was grooming his second son Stalin as his heir, with his elder son Azhagiri—considered a strongman in the Madurai region—in no mood to step aside. In 2007, Tamil daily Dinakaran, which is owned by the Marans, published a survey that portrayed Stalin as a far more popular choice as the patriarch's heir while Azhagiri and Karunanidhi's daughter Kanimozhi were shown in poor light.
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The first salvo was fired in September 2007, when DMK launched its own TV channel Kalaignar TV. Then, Azhagiri launched his own MSO Royal Cable Vision (RCV) in June 2008 and local cable operators in Thanjavur and Thirunelveli were sternly directed to shift loyalties immediately. A month later, the Chief Minister launched Arasu Cable TV Corp, a state-run multi-systems operator with IAS officer Brijeshwar Singh as CEO.
But Arasu couldn't make the cut when Sun Group refused to distribute content through it; so did Star and Sony. Not getting access to the most popular television channels was unacceptable, and local cable operators started backing out of deals they had made with Arasu. The state-owned company moved TDSAT on the matter—and won—but it didn't really recover. Mainly because the familyfeud ended towards the end of 2008 when Karunanidhi and his estranged nephews patched up.
Arasu was really superfluous to requirements now, but throwing a spanner in the works was the MSO's new chief C Umasankar. The 1990 batch IAS officer took over in November 2008 when Singh went to become NHAI chief. And Umasankar wanted to strengthen Arasu, perhaps contrary to the wishes of the power that be. "They wanted to kill Arasu," says Umasankar, alleging that SCV's henchmen destroyed Arasu's optic fibre cables at more than 20 locations in December 2008. Around the same time, Umasankar drafted a "nationalisation proposal" that made a case for the government taking over SCV; he was shunted out of Arasu and appointed the commissioner of small savings. The state government suspended him, pending enquiry into charges that he had falsified a caste certificate to join the IAS.
Endgame
What happens now? Some industry sources believe Sun Network's fortunes may not be affected much by Jayalalithaa's proposal. The group has grown much beyond cable distribution and has extended its reach well beyond Tamil Nadu. But the problems are much deeper. This time around, the Marans lack proper political backing. The DMK's position has weakened as a UPA ally and as a party—not just due to the election loss but also due to the 2G scam fallout that has seen Kanimozhi and former telecom minister A Raja sent to prison. Now, the Aircel case muck may stick on Dayanidhi. Worse, the cold wars within the DMK's first family aren't exactly helping. The last thing they need now is to be entangled (or choked) by Jayalalithaa's cable move.
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