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This Article is From May 17, 2020

UK Media Watchdog Fines Zakir Naik's Peace TV For "Hate Speech", "Highly Offensive" Content

Zakir Naik left India in 2016 and subsequently moved to Malaysia, where he was granted permanent residency.

UK Media Watchdog Fines Zakir Naik's Peace TV For "Hate Speech", "Highly Offensive" Content
Zakir Naik has been wanted in India for money laundering and inciting extremism.
London:

UK's media watchdog Ofcom has fined controversial Islamic preacher Zakir Naik''s Peace TV network 300,000 pounds for broadcasting "hate speech" and "highly offensive" content in the country.

The London-based regulator for the communications services in the UK has fined licence holders of Peace TV Urdu 200,000 pounds and Peace TV 100,000 pounds for breaking its broadcasting rules.

"Our investigations found that programmes broadcast on Peace TV Urdu and Peace TV contained hate speech and highly offensive content, which in one instance was likely to incite crime," it said.

"We concluded that the content represented serious failures of compliance with our broadcasting rules, which warranted fines. Ofcom has today fined the former licence holders of Peace TV Urdu 200,000 pounds and Peace TV 100,000 pounds for breaking our broadcasting rules," Ofcom said in a statement.

Peace TV is owned by Lord Productions Limited, and Club TV holds the licence of Peace TV Urdu. Both have the Universal Broadcasting Corporation Limited as their parent company which is owned by Naik, a 54-year-old televangelist and Islamic preacher from Mumbai.

"The former licence holders, Club TV and Lord Production must now pay 200,000 pounds and 100,000 pounds respectively to HM Paymaster General," said the statement issued early this month.

Peace TV is a nonprofit satellite television network broadcasting free-to-air programmes in English, Bengali and Urdu languages from Dubai. The founder and president of Peace TV is Naik.

The controversial preacher has been wanted in India for money laundering and inciting extremism through hate speeches. He left India in 2016 and subsequently moved to Malaysia, where he was granted permanent residency.

Last week, India made a formal request to the Malaysian government for his extradition.
He was banned from entering into the UK in 2010 due to his "unacceptable behaviour". 

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