Jamaica bans media content glorifying illegal activities

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Media content that “glorifies illegal activity” – such as drug and gun use has been banned by Jamaica’s broadcasting authority, the BBC has reported.
The report say the new rules cover TV and radio – including music – and list specific topics that are off-limits.
It said scamming, drug abuse and the illegal use of firearms cannot be “promoted” – and swearing or “near-sounding” replacements are also banned.
But the strict nature of the ban has been criticised by some artists who argue music is a reflection of life.
It comes amid high levels of violent crime in Jamaica – in 2021, the island nation had one of the highest murder rates in Latin America and the Caribbea
But the broadcasting agency says the use of public airwaves to broadcast songs that glorify illegal activity could give “the wrong impression that criminality is an accepted feature of Jamaican culture and society”.
All forms of “illegal or criminal activity” are now prohibited in an effort to help keep the airwaves “clean”, it said – and station operators are required to take immediate steps to comply.
Concern that offending content could normalise criminality among young adults and “vulnerable and impressionable” youths was also cited as a reason for the changes.
However, some of Jamaica’s musical artists have criticised the move.
“We can’t stop the creatives (artists) from singing about what they see around them or grew around,” said Romeich, a local music manager and producer in an Instagram post.
He went on to ask if “Jamaica the only country that has children? Because the same children listen to these same songs elsewhere”.

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