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An Act to regulate
the possession of wireless telegraphy apparatus.
Whereas it is expedient
to regulate the possession of wireless telegraphy
apparatus in India; It is hereby enacted
as follows:
1. Short title, extent and commencement.—
(1) This Act may be called the Indian Wireless
Telegraphy Act, 1933.
(2) It extends to the whole of India.
(3) It shall come into force on such date as the
Central Government may, by notification in the
Official Gazette, appoint.
2. Definitions.—In this Act, unless
there is anything repugnant in the subject or context—
(1) ‘wireless
communication’ means any transmission,
omission or reception of signs, signals,
writing, images and sounds, or intelligence
of any nature by means of electricity, magnetism,
or Radio waves or Hertzian waves, without
the use of wires or other continuous electrical
conductors between the transmitting and the
receiving apparatus;
Explanation.—‘Radio waves’ or ‘Hertzian
waves’ means electromagnetic waves
of frequencies lower than 3,000 gigacycles
per second propagated in space without artificial
guide;
(2) ‘wireless
telegraphy apparatus’ means any apparatus,
appliance, instrument or material used or
capable of use in wireless communication,
and includes any article determined by rule
made under Sec. 10 to be wireless telegraphy
apparatus, but does not include any such
apparatus, appliance, instrument or material
commonly used for other electrical purposes,
unless it has been specially designed or
adapted for wireless communication or forms
part of some apparatus, appliance, instrument
or material specially so designed or adapted,
nor any article determined by rule made under
Section 10 not to be wireless telegraphy
apparatus;
(2A) ‘wireless transmitter’ means any
apparatus, appliance, instrument or material used
or capable of use for transmission or omission
of wireless communication;
(3) ‘prescribed’ means prescribed by
rules made under Section 10.
3. Prohibition of possession of wireless telegraphy
apparatus without licence.—Save
as provided by Section 4, no person shall possess
wireless telegraphy apparatus except under and
in accordance with a licence issued under this
Act.
4. Power of Central
Government to exempt persons from provisions
of the Act.—The
Central Government may by rules made under
this Act exempt any person or any class
of persons from the provisions of this
Act either generally or subject to prescribed
conditions, or in respect of specified
wireless telegraphy apparatus.
5. Licences.—The telegraphy
authority constituted under the Indian Telegraph
Act, 1885, shall be the authority competent
to issue licences to possess wireless telegraphy
apparatus under this Act, and may issue licences
in such manner, on such conditions and subject
to such payments, as may be prescribed.
6. Offence and penalty.—
(1) Whoever possesses
any wireless telegraphy apparatus, other
than a wireless transmitter, in contravention
of the provisions of Section 3 shall be punished,
in the case of the first offence, with fine
which may extend to one hundred rupees, and,
in the case of a second or subsequent offence,
with fine which may extend to two hundred
and fifty rupees.
(1A) Whoever possesses any wireless transmitter
in contravention of the provisions of Section 3
shall be punished with imprisonment which may extend
to three years, or with fine which may extend to
one thousand rupees or with both.
(2) For the purposes
of this section a Court may presume that
a person possesses wireless telegraphy apparatus
if such apparatus is under his ostensible
charge, or is located in any premises or
place over which he has effective control.
(3) If in the trial
of an offence under this section the accused
is convicted the Court shall decide whether
any apparatus in respect of which an offence
has been committed should be confiscated,
and, if it so decides, may order confiscation
accordingly.
7. Power of search.—Any officer specially
empowered by the Central Government in this behalf
may search any building, vessel or place in which
he has reason to believe that any wireless telegraphy
apparatus, in respect of which an offence punishable
under Section 6 has been committed, is kept or
concealed, and take possession thereof.
8. Apparatus confiscated or having no owner
to be property of Central Government.—All
wireless telegraphy apparatus confiscated under
the provisions of sub-section (3) of Section 6,
and all wireless telegraphy apparatus having no
ostensible owner shall be the property of the Central
Government.
9. Power of Court to direct payment of fines
to prescribed authority.— Ceased to have
effect by A.O., 1937 and repealed by the Repealing
and< Amending Act, 1940 (32 of 1940), S. 2 and
Sch. I
10. Power of Central Government to make rules.—
(1) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, make rules for the purpose
of carrying into effect the provisions of this
Act.
(2) In particular and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing power, such rules may
provide for—
(i) determining that any article or class
of article shall be or shall not be wireless telegraphy
apparatus for the purposes of this Act;
(ii) the exemption of persons or classes
of persons under Section< 4 from the provisions
of this Act;
(iii) the manner of and the conditions governing
the issue, renewal, suspension and cancellation
of licences, the form of licences and the payments
to be made for the issue and renewal of licences;
(iv) the maintenance of records containing
details of the acquisition and disposal by sale
or otherwise of wireless telegraphy apparatus possessed
by dealers in wireless telegraphy apparatus;
(v) the conditions governing the sale of
wireless telegraphy apparatus by dealers in and
manufacturers of such apparatus.
(3) In making a rule under this section the Central
Government may direct that a breach of it shall
be punishable with fine which may extend to one
hundred rupees.
(4) Every rule made [in] this section shall be
laid as soon as may be after it is made before
each House of Parliament while it is in session
for a total period of 30 days which may be comprised
in one session or in two successive sessions, and
if, before the expiry of the session in which it
is so laid or the session immediately following
both Houses agree in making any modification in
the rule or both Houses agree that the rule should
not be made, the rule shall thereafter have effect
only in such modified form or be of no effect,
as the case may be; so however, that any such modification
or annulment shall be without prejudice to the
validity of anything previously done under that
rule.
11. Savings of Indian Telegraph Act, 1885.—Nothing
in this Act contained shall authorise the doing
of anything prohibited under the Indian Telegraph
Act, 1885, and no licence issued under this Act
shall authorise any person to do anything for the
doing of which a licence or permission under the
Indian Telegraph Act, 1885, is necessary.
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