http://scroll.in/article/821986/the-cash-crunch-has-forced-manipur-to-make-do-with-no-newspapers-for-three-days

NOTE DEMONETISATION

The cash crunch has forced Manipur to make do with no newspapers for three days

Publishers say they were forced to take this unprecedented decision as
distributors had no money to buy papers.

4 hours ago
Updated 3 hours ago

Hijam Rajesh

To put the record straight, the decision of the All Manipur
Publishers’ Association to shut shop for three days and suspend the
publication of Imphal-based daily newspapers from November 18 to 20
was not against the demonetisation of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes by the
Bharatiya Janata Party-led government in Delhi.

In fact, there was nothing political in it.

Rather, it was a collective voice against the acute shortage of
smaller notes, the appeal of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his
ministers to bear with the inconvenience for 50 days having failed to
cut ice with the publishers.

In Manipur, the practice among distributors or hawkers is to go to the
distribution sections of various newspaper offices, buy the papers
with instant cash and deliver them to readers. They get a subsidy: for
example, if a newspaper has a selling price of Rs 4.5, the distributor
or hawker gets it for Rs 3 and makes a profit of Rs 1.5.

Most distributors buy a lot of newspaper on a single day and make a
round of all the newspaper houses. Or they have arrangements where
different groups buy different newspapers in bulk and they all meet at
a point to exchange papers.

With banknotes of smaller denominations becoming scarce after the
government’s announcement withdrawing Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 on November
8, the distributors tried to buy papers with the demonetised cash.

In a precursor of things to come, the All Manipur Newspaper
Publishers’ Association issued a statement on November 15 saying that
they may not be in a position to publish the day’s paper if the
distributors continued to pay in demonetised notes. To prevent such an
event, they asked that newspapers be added to the list of services
allowed to accept banned notes till November 24, such as government
hospitals, milk booths, air and rail ticketing, utility bills,
pharmacies, and crematoriums and burial grounds.

What has made matters worse is that distributors in Manipur are not a
very well organised sector. They do have the All Manipur Newspaper
Sales and Distributors’ Association, but this does not have much
influence.

A first in Manipur
This is not the first time newspaper houses in Manipur have suspended
publication. But this is the first time publishers themselves have
decided on such a move.

The state BJP, including its two MLAs, have promised to take the
matter up with the concerned authority and see if arrangements can be
made in the from of separate counters at banks for distributors to
exchange their old banknotes.

The suspension of newspaper publication has only added to Manipur’s
many troubles. The public here has been left reeling by not just the
demonetisation move but also an ongoing economic blockade on national
highways connecting the state to the rest of the country. The
blockade, called by the United Naga Council against the creation of
two new districts, Sadar Hills and Jiribam, has led to petrol prices
going over Rs 200 a litre in the black market.

The writer is the editor of the Sangai Express.

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Peace Is Doable

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