You have read how Avertanus D'souza demolished Sujay's psych. You know how Wendel Rodricks threw Sujay out of a party. Now read what Claude Alvares exposed his manipulations and decide:
MINING BLUES AND ITS MANY HUES: WHEN P.R. GETS IT BADLY WRONG By Claude Alvares Sujay Gupta's article, 'Green movement has shades of black' introduces another colour to the Naxalite controversy. Last week, we were all being called 'red' by the chief of the 'saffron' party, even though what we are attempting to protect is green. For heaven's sake, what will they call us next? Yellow? No, that's reserved exclusively for journalists. 'White' is trade-marked for 'corporate media consultant' as their principal business is 'whitewash'. Indigo is the colour of music, as we all know, so we can safely keep it out. But purple is the colour of one's face when one finds, like Sujay Gupta is now discovering, that all his facts are wrong. That's why he's retired from good journalism as we all know and practice it. This is a guy who came in for our World Environment Day function on June 5 at Sulcornem pretending to be one of us. When asked, he said he was working with Prudent Media. Miguel Braganza says Sujay Gupta repeated this when he travelled back with him in the car all the way back to Panjim. In Goa, we rarely counter-check credentials. We take people at their word. The day Seby Rodrigues was attacked as a 'Naxalite', we were amazed to hear that Sujay Gupta was organizing a press conference for people from Rivona who would spill to the journalists the gory details of Seby inciting villagers to kill policemen. Disturbed, I called up Arvind Bhatikar, chairperson of Prudent Media. He informed me that Sujay Gupta was not employed by Prudent Media. He also told me that Sujay was now a 'corporate media consultant'. I confronted Gupta on the street outside the GUJ (Goa Union of Journalists) office after the press conference he had organised. (Miguel and a few of the brethren from the media were also present.) At this point of time, he flatly denied any involvement in the press conference "except for sending out two or three SMS messages." I got one of those messages, like many other journalists. Fortunately it has remained un-erased on my cell and so I can recall it here verbatim: "People of colomb, who were shown films by sebi rodrigues depicting the killing of policemen by naxalites will meet the press at the GUJ hall. They will also spk abt the activities of sebi and his group from Jharkhand in the mining areas. Sujay Gupta." Now check the sheer 'quality' of the information being purveyed by this former editor and NDTV reporter: it emerges that there is no such film at all. His "group from jharkhand" is actually a group of students from the Nirmala Institute of Social Work in Mumbai, doing field-work for their degree courses in social work! Now would you trust a person who lies about his employment, refuses to disclose his actual employers, and then organizes press conferences on the basis of fabricated information? Journalists informed us that prior to the press conference, Gupta had been carrying around Seby's photograph for circulation for four days. After the Naxalite bogey burst in Manohar Parrikar's and Sujay Gupta's face, Gupta has now come up with some new tactics based on information he has apparently gathered from the mining companies to whom he has endeared himself. The title of his article is called "shades of black" but stops short of the defamatory term "blackmail". The whole trend of the article is that something unhealthy is going on which our former hero from NDTV has come here to Goa, like a new Cervantes, to tilt against. This time he tries to be authentic and quotes cheque numbers. And what is his story? Gupta says that Shyamsundar Naik (rudely referred to by him as a 'fellow') accepted a compensation cheque of Rs.48,000 from one mining company. Gupta also says that Shyamsundar Naik demanded (and got) Rs. 11,44,000 from the company for a cultural organization headed by him. He does not claim that these are illegal sums. He cannot because they are paid by cheque. Do "blackmailer" accept money via cheques? Is ransom money paid into kidnappers' accounts using bank instruments? What world is Sujay Gupta living in? But even the "facts" purveyed above are wrong. Shyamsundar has never accepted any cheque for Rs.48,000 from any mining company. There is no cheque in the name of Shyamsundar Naik! So will our gallant investigative reporter prove what he has written in black and white or will he have the decency to apologize? The correct fact is that the mining company paid out not Rs. 48,000 but Rs.33.75 lakhs to 43 people (in sums varying from Rs.48,000 to Rs.54,000) as compensation for pollution, for damage to their paddy fields and livelihood. Shyamsundar's name is not to be found in the list of 43 people compensated. Here is an outright admission of liability by mining companies -- who in Gupta's perception are doing 'good' mining, who compensate people officially by cheque for destroying their livelihood and village environment. When Shyamsundar Naik first came to my office to seek help from the Goa Foundation for the torture wrought on his village Advalpal by the three mining companies in the neighbourhood, he showed me the details of the payments before he even told me his story. He was contrite. He said for two years they moved every authority, including Deputy Collector Arvind Bugde. Nobody came to help them. In desperation, the people decided to accept monetary compensation. They needed something to stay alive. But realizing that as the condition of their lands worsened and their water dried up altogether, they would soon be forced to abandon their village, they decided to stay put and fight. Would the Goa Foundation help them with understanding their legal rights and what the laws of the land demand from the conduct of mining operators? I was appalled not because the villagers had accepted money but because they had compromised their futures for so little! Here were companies destroying their life and livelihood, their village, its water-bodies, their paddy fields and nullahs; responsible, in addition, for a devastating flood in 2000; and they had settled for Rs.48,000! Were they out of their mind? Acceptance of compensation for damage caused is the second best option afforded to us by the law when someone has done us irreparable harm. The first (and best) option is a suit for closure of the mine and punitive damages in crores. However, we do not live in the best of all possible worlds. We live in a world where a Sujay Gupta does not ask why a mining company would pay Rs.33.75 lakhs to 43 people if all that the company had done was right, proper and legal. He feels that people should suffer and allow themselves to be ground into the mud and take suffering caused by mining with a smile and a laugh. They are after all helping the nation and the nation's (and China's) economy! How dare they ask for money! Did he ask for compensation when he was editor of GT? Not at all, he worked there for free! Sujay Gupta wants to know how the sum of Rs.11,44,000 – also recorded in the memorandum of agreement as compensation for pollution and damages -- paid to the Varchawada Samiti was utilised. First of all, who is he to ask? Who has paid him to ask this question? Nobody has any right to ask any person or organization how they have spent -- if they indeed have -- their (undervalued) compensation money. This is adding insult to injury. Why does he not ask instead where our 40 thieves spend the money that they loot daily from the public exchequer. Or where the mine owners spend the money they raise -- running into crores -- from their illegal mines. At the end, Gupta asks for a "mature" debate on mining. Mature debates can only be held with mature journalists, not immature hacks
