United Nations: India has dismissed a UN report that claims “traditional cultural expressions” are under threat in the country. Calling the report inaccurate, India has said that traditional arts, crafts and performances are thriving in the country.
“India possesses a rich and diverse cultural heritage of artistic, literary, musical, and craft traditions spanning millennia… they continue to flourish across the country,” Lok Sabha member Indra Hang Subba said at the UN on Friday,
“India’s cultural economy, including traditional arts, crafts, and performances, continues to thrive with the robust popular and government support”, the MP from the Sikkim Krantikari Morcha said.
“We find no empirical data that substantiates the claim of declining demand for India’s traditional cultural expressions,” he added.
“Recognising the immense value of this heritage, India has established comprehensive legal and institutional frameworks to protect and promote traditional knowledge and cultural expressions and the geographical indications of goods,” Subba further said.
He was responding to claims by Alexandra Xanthaki, the UN’s Special Rapporteur for Cultural Rights, in her report that was being discussed at the General Assembly’s Third Committee, which deals with cultural issues.
A professor at Britain’s Brunel University, Xanthaki is one of the special rapporteurs, who are unpaid independent experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council to monitor what it asserts are human rights issues and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Secretary-General or the UN.
in her report, it has been claimed that “cultural expressions” in India were facing decreasing demand and were further threatened by middlemen and copyright laws.
A strange claim has also cropped up in the report. It says that the Indian Copyright Act was of a “communal nature” and, therefore, did not adequately protect the “form of traditional knowledge and art”.
“The characterisation of protection under India’s copyright law as superficial is inaccurate and unwarranted,” Subba said.
The Copyright Act and the Information Technology Act “provide robust mechanisms to regulate intermediaries, and protect creators’ rights, including provisions for licensing, royalty collection and enforcement against infringement”, the MP added.
Xanthaki’s observations are based on submissions from the Centre for Advanced Studies in Cyber Law and Artificial Intelligence at Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law in Punjab, the footnotes reveal.
In her report, Xanthaki claimed that threats to traditional art were “exacerbated” by AI-generated art, which imitates traditional art without crediting or compensating the creators.
The Indian MP disagreed and said that “technology and new digital platforms have further enhanced the outreach of and demand for traditional cultural expressions”.
While focusing on AI, Xanthaki mentioned that a group of major newspaper and book publishers has brought a case before the Delhi High Court, claiming that OpenAI is using their content without authorisation to train ChatGPT.
The professor criticised the use of AI, citing its inadequacies in creating Indian classical music and dance.
“Microtonal variations known as shruti and raga in Indian classical music cannot be reproduced by AI tools”, she said, and, therefore, do not “capture the emotional essence and depth of what artists are trying to convey through the art form”.
“The widely popular dance form from Tamil Nadu also has its own set of codified gestures and rhythmic sequences that become a struggle for AI”, and “robs the dance form of its emotional expression”, Xanthaki said in the report.
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