|
Parliamentary
Assembly
Assemblée parlementaire
|
|
RECOMMENDATION 926 (1981)[1]
on questions raised by cable television and by direct
satellite broadcasts
The Assembly,
1. Having considered the report of its Legal Affairs Committee
(Doc. 4756), and the opinion of its Committee on Culture and
Education (Doc. 4782) ;
2. Considering that new technological developments, such as
direct broadcasting satellites, cable television as well as
distribution by cable, will have a considerable impact on the
national broadcasting systems in Council of Europe member
states ;
3. Welcoming the fact that satellite broadcasting systems
imply a multiplication of radio and television programmes, and
will present excellent opportunities for the development of a
permanent European co-operation on radio and television
programmes ;
4. Recalling its many reports on the mass media, and in
particular its Recommendation 747 (1975) on press
concentrations, 748 (1975) on the role and management of
telecommunications in a democratic society, and 834 (1978) on
threats to the freedom of the press and television ;
5. Recalling from this last recommendation especially :
- the consideration "that freedom of the press and television,
as a fundamental component of freedom of expression, is a
prerequisite for a democratic political system, and that
therefore the Council of Europe must contribute to
safeguarding such freedom" ;
- the call "for the enactment of national legislation, where
still missing, governing broadcasts by satellite and by cable,
as well as by local radio and television stations" ;
- the belief "that statutes for the editorial staff of both
written and audio-visual media, to be drafted nationally on
the basis of guidelines set by the Council of Europe, could
contribute to guaranteeing freedom of expression and
information..." ;
6. Considering that Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Italy,
the Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom are
co-operating, under the supervision of the European Space
Agency, to launch a European broadcasting satellite
(L-Sat) in 1985 ;
7. Considering that France and the Federal Republic of Germany
have already decided to institute operational broadcasting
services using national satellites, whereas others such as
Italy and the United Kingdom are studying the possibility of
doing so ;
8. Considering that Sweden is studying the launching of
Tele-X, an experimental pre-operational satellite, in
1986, and that the five Nordic countries are considering a
joint system for radio and television broadcasting, the
so-called Nordsat project ;
9. Considering that a number of private companies are planning
to transmit commercial television programmes with direct
broadcast satellites in two or three years' time ;
10. Considering that the World Administrative Radio Conference
(WARC) of 1977 reached agreement on the principle of national
areas of coverage for satellite transmissions with minimum
overlap on the territory of other countries, but that,
nevertheless, a considerable "spill-over" is inevitable ;
11. Considering that, as a consequence of the "spill-over",
satellite television programmes, although directed at one of a
number of central and western European states, may also be
captured in at least 25 million homes outside national
territory ;
12. Considering that, in accordance with the WARC decisions,
no satellite broadcasts may take place without prior agreement
of the state at which territory the broadcasts are primarily
directed ;
13. Considering that as a result of these developments the
following dangers may arise :
i. national legislation may be undermined, as Council of
Europe member states will have difficulty in applying their
national laws to foreign television programmes ;
ii. the intellectual property rights of authors, composers and
performing artists may be affected especially by cable
television ;
iii. the independence of programme-makers vis-à-vis the state
and commercial interests may be more severely threatened than
at present, and thus the exercise of the freedom of expression
may be further impeded ;
iv. the same programmes may be broadcast to a large part of
Europe and, mainly through the deterioration of the financial
resources of existing broadcasting organisations and through
the competition for viewers, the intellectual and cultural
pluriformity in Council of Europe member states may
decline ;
14. Considering that, in view of these dangers and of the
rapid technological developments, it is necessary and urgent
that European states cooperate to solve the legal problems
raised by the transmission of television programmes through
satellites and cable networks ;
15. Considering that the measures to be taken both at national
and international level should be on the broadcasting rather
than on the receiving end, and that they may include the
following :
i. safeguards for the application of national legislation for
the protection of public health and morals, and for the
application of penal law ;
ii. effective measures to guarantee that advertisers will
comply with national and international provisions ;
iii. if television channels are sold to commercial companies
or to foreign countries, they should be made subject to the
same regulations as domestic broadcasting organisations ;
16. Recalling Resolution No. Ill on cultural development and
the electronic media, of the 3rd Conference of European
Ministers with responsibility for Cultural Affairs
(Luxembourg, 1981) :
17. Desirous to protect adequately the rights of authors,
composers and performing artists ;
18. Considering that further measures to be taken should
safeguard :
i. the independence of those responsible for the programmes
vis-à-vis the state ;
ii. the independence of those responsible for the programmes
vis-à-vis capital suppliers and advertisers ;
iii. the clear separation between programmes and
advertising ;
iv. the integrity of commercial information by strict
interdiction of hidden or misleading advertising and of
subliminal messages ;
19. Considering that, in order to increase or safeguard
pluriformity of television broadcasts, it may be
indicated :
i. to take measures to guarantee the access of all political,
social and cultural forces to the electronic media on fair and
equitable terms ;
ii. to study the desirability and the possibilities of
additional financing of broadcasting companies and television
programmes by public means ;
20. Recalling the European Agreement for the prevention of
broadcasts transmitted from stations outside national
territories (1965) ;
21. Considering that the Council of Europe, embracing nearly
all free and democratic countries in Europe, is particularly
well-suited to deal with these questions, and that it has
already studied some of them in the framework of its Steering
Committee on the Mass Media and its subordinate committees
which deal with the technological, economic, social, legal and
human rights aspects,
22. Recommends that the Committee of Ministers :
a. instruct the Steering Committee on the Mass Media to
study, in consultation with the other steering committees
involved, the problems raised by cable television and by
direct satellite broadcasting, in view of arriving at a
European agreement :
i. on securing the artistic independence of programme-makers
vis-à-vis the state and commercial interest ;
ii. on concrete legal co-operation, possibly in the form of a
convention ;
iii. on measures to educate the public, and especially young
people, to appreciate and evaluate the media in
question ;
iv. on copyright and royalty questions ;
v. on a code of standards regarding programme content,
acceptable also to broadcasting organisations ;
b. invite the member governments to scrutinise their
national broadcasting and cable legislation to see whether it
is in line with the principles mentioned above and adapt it if
necessary.
[1]. Assembly debate on 2 October 1981
(12th Sitting) (see Doc. 4756, report of the Legal Affairs
Committee).
Text adopted by the Assembly on 7 October 1981 (17th
Sitting).
|