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Police also seized dozens of satellite receivers, VCRs, VCD players and television sets in raids in many localities of Karachi on Saturday.
The ban on Indian television channels was imposed by the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) in December 2001 at the height of Indo-Pak military tensions.
Though Star television's bouquet of channels was exempted, Star News continues to be in the banned list.
"We are arresting only those cable operators who are airing Indian movies and banned Indian channels illegally," local police chief Preedy Aijaz Hashmi told The News daily.
He said the violators would be punished under PEMRA laws. The punishment could be two years in prison or a Rs one million fine.
The ban on Indian channels, hugely popular in Pakistan, has continued though India had lifted its earlier ban on PTV, Pakistan's national channel.
Officials in PERMA, a body created by the Musharraf government to work out new policy guidelines for the television channels say the ban should continue in order to encourage new private channels like Indus Television and ARY Television being run by expatriate Pakistanis from Dubai and London.
PTV too has modernised its programme structure.
Some more Pakistani channels are expected to become operational on August 14, Pakistan's independence day.
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