---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: arshad amanullah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 2008/9/19
Subject: [arkitectindia] Today's "media circus" at Jamia
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Sorry for xposting.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Yousuf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, Sep 19, 2008 at 8:27 PM
Subject: [peace initiative] Today's "media circus" at Jamia
To: Peace Initiative <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, jmi list
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Friends
I have titled this message the "media circus", although I am actually
referring to this morning's so-called encounter killing of two young
people referred to as "terrorists" in L-18 Batla House, Jamia Nagar,
by the Delhi police. I call it media circus because that's what I
think it really is, like many more such incidents.

The incident happened in my neigbourhood, about 150 meters from my
house. So I have the opportunity to see how things are turning up. I
had gone out of the area for some work while the incident was taking
place around 11 am, but found it impossible to reach back home 2 hours
later, because the road for about 1 and a half kilometer (on both
sides) was completely blocked, not by the police vehicles, but by the
parked OB vans of the countless TV channels, some of which I never
heard of before. Each of these vehicles had its generators on, and
thick video cables jetting out of them for several meters to the other
end where the cameraperson and the excited anchor were shouting how
two terrorists have been killed in the fierce encounter. Most local
people are surprised at the speed with which the TV crews arrived here
and in such large number. Apparently, the Delhi Police had already
told a section of the press they are going for a raid in Batla House,
based
on the suspect Abu Bashir's tip-off (I heard this from a anchor on
Times NOW channel, although Police chief Dadwal is now denying there
is any link with Abu Bashir), but they didn't obviously say it was
going to be an encounter. Its strange that the local residents got to
know about the incident only after the two people had been killed –
many in fact learnt it from the Aaj-tak channel. They claim they heard
only the police firing and no gunshots from inside the flat, which the
police claim have injured two of their constables.

Most of you watching news TV in your homes may have already heard the
cacophony of the TV anchors, each trying to be shriller than the other
to prove that the local members of the Indian Mujahideen have been
killed. They now seem to have memorized their lines on this issue
well, since they have to repeat the same thing again and again. The
graphics, animated logos, crawling tickers, and dramatic
music/soundtrack to go with such coverage are always ready in the cans
to be used at short notice. A cameraman running towards Batla House is
nibbling at a burger while he holds on to a camera in his other hand.
I saw two members of a TV crew outside the Holy Family Hospital (where
the injured policemen have been taken) fiercely fight about which
camera angle would look best for a sound byte. Everything looks as if
planned and part of the usual business. The cops are happily allowing
the media to climb any wall to get the best shot while they beat the
local
rickshawpullers to leave the roads clean. The message has got across
loud and clear: we told you – Batla House is a haven of terrorists.

But many things sound fishy. I've been hearing a lot of angry
conversations in the neighborhood: people are asking that if the
police had only planned a simple raid (which they did 2 days ago in
Zakir Nagar and Abul Fazl Enclave too), why did they have to bring
battalions of police and encounter specialists with AK-56 and other
deadly looking guns (that I myself saw) in advance. And why is the
media called in even before the residents are told. Of course the fact
the this happens in the month of Ramzan, on a Friday, and near a large
mosque where people were going to gather in large numbers later for
prayers, sounds just too predictable and clichéd for anyone's
imagination. Some locals claim that the police had been visiting this
place (and that particular house) since last few days, and the
so-called terrorists and their weapons were probably "planted" last
night for this encounter. This claim would obviously find no takers in
the presently
created euphoria (did you see any channel showing a sound byte to this
affect?) I didn't find a single local resident who is not fed up with
this oft-repeated image of Jamia Nagar as harboring terrorists. But
none of the channels I saw aired the public angst against their
portrayal.

To be honest, one shouldn't deny that the Batla House area has some
criminal and anti-social elements, just as Darya Ganj or Shahadra or
Govindpuri would have. But most local residents believe that for Jamia
to become a haven of such criminal elements, the local police and
land-mafia are equally responsible. Jamia area is one of the rare
localities of Delhi where the rule of law doesn't apply in most
spheres. The land mafia openly indulges in illegal construction; no
rules of traffic apply here, the condition of civic amenities is
abysmal. Illegal shops, factories (many with child labour) and
businesses operate here actively with police connivance. The local
politicians (MLA, councilors) are actually part of the problem rather
than the solution. There is a full-scale illegal ISBT (bus stand)
running in Batla House's backyard to bring hundreds of migrants
everyday from small towns of UP (you can see the police openly
accepting bribe from its
operators any day).

There is no question of sealing whatever the heck business you may run
here, and most places stink with heaps of garbage everywhere. There
are no RWAs or citizen's initiatives to discuss the problems. It is
truly a manufactured ghetto of Delhi – why don't all these problems
happen in Lajpat Nagar or Kalkaji? I am positive that the authorities
are aware that criminals (or what they call terrorists) exist here.
But they deliberately allow them to thrive here – never to be touched
in the normal/peaceful times – keep them for the right time. It is as
if Batla House is a laboratory or breeding ground where things are
allowed to grow by providing all the required ingredients and safety.
The fruits are plucked only when they are ripe (or required). So
today, they simply came to gather the fruit they had sown, and made a
big exhibition of it by calling the media. The local people,
frightened that the next encounter may happen in their house, simply
squirm and hide in their personal ghettos.

In all this, a big responsibility lies with the media, and I am yet to
come across bold and honest reporters who are ready to go beyond the
obvious and investigate the truth – not simply repeat what is told to
them by the authorities or their channel bosses.

Yousuf Saeed
September 19, 2008



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-- 
Ranjit

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