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SINGAPORE - The Media Development Authority (MDA) has fined MediaCorp $6,300 for breaching the Free-to-air Radio Programme Code.
MDA said in a statement: "As a free-to-air radio broadcaster, MediaCorp is expected to observe the requirements laid out in the Free-to- air Radio Programme Code which seeks to protect community interests by ensuring broadcast programming do not offend good taste or decency."
The authority said that the incident occurred on March 20, when a deejay on the Class 95 'Morning Express' programme used a derogatory term to describe a visually-impaired woman who said she was denied service at a fast food outlet.
The same term was again used on air the following day by the same deejay.
On Mar 21, The New Paper reported that DJ Joe Augustin used the word "a-hole" to describe the visually-impaired person.
His fellow DJ Glenn Ong then called him an "a** hole" for using that word, the paper reported.
Upon investigation, MDA concluded the use of the derogatory term has contravened the Free-to-air Radio Programme Code, which states that "obscene or offensive jokes, words, songs dialogue should not be broadcast".
An MDA spokesperson said: "Radio exerts a strong influence on the community. In Singapore, as a media platform for entertainment, information and education, radio broadcast reaches almost all homes and is easily accessible to all people, including the young. Because of its impact, programmes over radio must at all times maintain a standard that is acceptable to the community and does not offend good taste or decency."
MDA said in a statement: "As a free-to-air radio broadcaster, MediaCorp is expected to observe the requirements laid out in the Free-to- air Radio Programme Code which seeks to protect community interests by ensuring broadcast programming do not offend good taste or decency."
The authority said that the incident occurred on March 20, when a deejay on the Class 95 'Morning Express' programme used a derogatory term to describe a visually-impaired woman who said she was denied service at a fast food outlet.
The same term was again used on air the following day by the same deejay.
On Mar 21, The New Paper reported that DJ Joe Augustin used the word "a-hole" to describe the visually-impaired person.
His fellow DJ Glenn Ong then called him an "a** hole" for using that word, the paper reported.
Upon investigation, MDA concluded the use of the derogatory term has contravened the Free-to-air Radio Programme Code, which states that "obscene or offensive jokes, words, songs dialogue should not be broadcast".
An MDA spokesperson said: "Radio exerts a strong influence on the community. In Singapore, as a media platform for entertainment, information and education, radio broadcast reaches almost all homes and is easily accessible to all people, including the young. Because of its impact, programmes over radio must at all times maintain a standard that is acceptable to the community and does not offend good taste or decency."