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Quick Take Opinions & Insights | The HinduBusinessLine

Budget delivers a muted bang Quick Take: Why the stock markets cheered, while bond markets sulked post Budget Dealing with invasion of locusts Dealing with invasion of locusts Of human bondage Don’t shoot the messenger Deplorable attempt to gag the media Time to rethink sale of Air India Making a circus of a global pandemic No durable solutions in YES Bank rescue RBI’s right in using non-conventional tools to combat Covid Why the markets were miffed with the Budget Striking at concentration of power India really needed a Chief of Defence Staff State power on overdrive in Jamia Millia Stimulus package: A tricky tangle Bharat Bond ETF: For the savvy investor Govt must reduce drafting errors in Bills introduced Lenders to Karvy are being unreasonable Intriguing moves in Pakistan establishment Sell Air India in a prudent fashion, don’t shut it Why have private petrol pumps not come up? Supreme Court rules correctly on Maharashtra crisis IT sector needs to get more ‘agile’ Serious slowdown calls for demand-side steps NRC is set for a quiet burial, and that’s for the good PSU disinvestment: Strategically right Is the worst over for the auto sector? Telecom tariff hike will undermine Digital India plan Tangled web Epidemic indifference Bringing CJI under RTI, a welcome move Who Will Govern the Governors? Can Kartarpur corridor ease tensions between India and Pak? Moody blues for Indian economy Falling demand for gold is good for the economy AIF rescue: Devil in the details Regulator for e-commerce in India: Licence raj redux? Delhi police protest: Mutiny in the Ranks The last word has not been said on the NRC Stop playing political games in Maharashtra Something’s burning: North India’s smog, a cauldron of faulty policies Trump likely to survive impeachment and gain from it Sensex all-time high at odds with macro-reality Risky A320neo aircraft of IndiGo, GoAir should be grounded immediately Baghdadi’s death not necessarily the end of ISIS All women spacewalk: A giant leap for womankind ‘Green crackers’ — there aren’t too many of them Right move to revive BSNL, MTNL Forget US Congress criticism on Kashmir; India must do the right thing Regulate the Web, don’t wreck it with control A transport strike in Telangana that needlessly boiled over Effects of cow slaughter ban show up in livestock census Regrettable gag order on Andhra Pradesh media PSU workers don’t deserve to be abandoned; they need ‘tough love’ Revise fisc numbers in the wake of slowdown Hidden from plain sight Before the switch Let consumer interest decide e-commerce policies Strategic sticking points between China and India How oxygen can help fight diseases Thumbs up from RSS Faceless Scrutiny Revive BSNL at the earliest Dip in GST collections tells a story No mistaking China’s superpower status Why another omnibus national ID card? Know your onions Wework episode should serve as a wake-up call for analysts and investors Tread with caution while framing rules for social media Jumping the gun To be meaningful, #HowdyModi has to go beyond optics E-cigarettes ban: Bolting the stable when the horses are still in Hindi as sole national language is an idea which militates against India’s pluralist unity in diversity Rupee skids to 71.5 on oil Quiet Please Tabrez Ansari lynching case: Rein In The Mobs Budget 2019: Why is the market miffed?
Govt, media and Arnab
By Poornima Joshi · 2020-01-31 · via Quick Take Opinions & Insights | The HinduBusinessLine
Many reporters risk being made an example of, for asking even the most routine questions. File Photo

Many reporters risk being made an example of, for asking even the most routine questions. File Photo

A stand-up comic made a TV star uncomfortable over what he has been passing off as journalism, and the whole world came crashing down, at least for Kunal Kamra, the comic. Kamra has been banned by four airlines after Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri’s prompt characterisation of his heckling of TV celebrity Arnab Goswami on board an IndiGo flight as “offensive behaviour designed to provoke and create disturbance”.

Just so that he was clear, the Minister also issued an advisory for other airlines to impose “similar restrictions” on Kamra. Neither the Minister nor any of the airlines waited even for the customary report from the pilot-in-command of the relevant aircraft before coming to the TV star’s rescue. The pilot who flew the aircraft where the incident took place, in the meantime, has clarified that Kamra’s behaviour did not qualify to be in the “Level 1 category” which, even when decided upon by a committee, invites a no-fly ban of three, not six, months.

Such touching concern by a Union Minister over a journalist’s welfare is rare given the ideal, adversarial nature of journalism. And one wouldn’t qualify to be a journalist if the immediate context is not explained for the incident to be understood in its entirety.

There is a world of difference between the chosen few, such as the TV Star whom the Minister and the airlines are busy cosseting, and the rest who are merely trying to do a job. The establishment’s gentle concern can be traced to the stark misrepresentation of the 17-year-old shooter at the students in Jamia Millia Islamia as a “Jamia protester” by the Republic TV. At the same time, journalists trying to merely report facts from the spot are routinely dragged out, pushed, detained and even beaten by the police.

On January 30, while star anchors were busy spinning the story about a shooter in Jamia Millia Islamia, three reporters on the spot – Shivesh Garg, Rajesh Kumar and Parthiv – were forcibly detained by the police in a stadium near Hari Nagar. These journalists showed the accreditation cards from the Press Information Bureau (PIB) to the police to explain that they had only come to Jamia to report but they were still roundly abused and kept in detention for hours.

Such treatment of journalists is part of a pattern under the ruling BJP. According to a list compiled by the Committee Against Assault on Journalists, a collective independent media and civil society groups to defend press freedom, as many as 14 journalists were gravely assaulted with just ten days between December 11-December 21 while covering anti-Citizenship (Amendment) Act protests.

On December 15, a policeman assaulted Bushra Sheikh of the BBC when she was covering a students’ protest in South Delhi. Her hair was pulled, she was abused and hit with a baton by the police. In a statement, the Indian Women’s Press Corps (IWPC) noted that this has “now become a pattern to attack journalists, particularly women journalists, to intimidate them”.

According to Azan Javaid of the news portal The Print , his phone was snatched and he was hit as well as abused by the police in Srinagar on September 17 when he and some other reporters were trying to cover a protest. “This was when the policemen on duty started hitting me. It was only after the intervention of some other journalists that I was let go. At some distance, I saw another colleague being thrashed by Khan,” said Javaid in his first-person account published in the news portal.

On December 20, Omar Rashid, The Hindu correspondent in Lucknow was detained and abused by the police. Another journalist, Pawan Jaiswal and his source for the news report Rajkumar Pal, were slapped with an FIR in September last year, for criminal conspiracy (120 B CrPC), obstructing a public servant in discharging duty (186 IPC), cheating (420 IPC) against him for his report on a school in Mirzapur (Uttar Pradesh) that was serving only roti-namak (bread and salt) to children as their mid-day meal. He was accused of “maligning the image of the state government”.

After prolonged protests by local journalists and intervention by the Press Council of India, Jaiswal’s name has been withdrawn from the police report. “But my source Rajkumar Pal’s name is still there as the main accused. No one has denied the report that I filed. There is video evidence of it. But there is still an FIR and I don’t know when I will be targeted too,” Jaiswal told BusinessLine over the phone from Lucknow.

This is the reality journalists live with on an everyday basis. Reporters, especially those covering the BJP beat, risk being made an example of, for asking even the most routine questions. The moral of the story under the circumstances is – if someone in power is overly concerned about a journalist’s welfare, it is time to examine his/her journalistic credentials.

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Published on January 31, 2020