[This government has made no bones about the fact that it has little
time for the media unless it is willing to sing its praises. Its
unwillingness to face critical questioning is exemplified by the fact
that after three years in office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has not
addressed a single press conference.
...
This government has also shown its willingness to use the Central
Bureau of Investigation, its denials notwithstanding, to teach any or
all of its opponents a lesson. Whether these opponents are human
rights activists like Teesta Setalvad or others, the first step is to
call in the agency to investigate alleged financial misdemeanours.
...
What we are witnessing today is the typical arrogance of a party that
believes it will rule all of India in the near future. Having won the
Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh in March, the BJP is riding high.
In its grand vision of a saffron-tinted India, there is no room for a
critical, adversarial media.

(Modi, all too evidently, believes in just one-way communications.
Unrefearsed cross-questioning is a strict no-no.

Consequently, he'd tolerate only megaphones, and not independent
media; would crush such enterprises at the very first available
opportunity.

- Sukla)

https://scroll.in/article/839773/ndtv-raids-the-bjps-saffron-tinted-view-of-india-has-no-room-for-a-watchdog-media

OPINION

NDTV raids: The BJP’s saffron-tinted view of India has no room for a
watchdog media

The message to critics is clear: We are watching you and will find
ways to silence you.

3 hours ago

Kalpana Sharma

There has always been an uneasy relationship between the state and the
media. This was reiterated by Monday’s raids by the Central Bureau of
Investigation on various establishments owned by NDTV co-founder and
executive chairperson Prannoy Roy – reportedly for defaulting on a
loan that the television company claimed had actually been repaid
seven years ago.

That this government will seek ways to intimidate its critics within
the media is not unexpected. Nor is it unique.

In the past too, many governments, at the Centre and in the states,
have investigated the financial dealings of media companies in an
effort to silence them. They did not need to declare an emergency or
impose press censorship to find ways to control or punish the media.

Intimidation an old trick
It is easy in these days of instant news to forget the times when
media meant essentially the print media and radio, the
government-controlled All India Radio. In those days, the government
controlled newsprint quotas. The easiest way to punish a recalcitrant
media house was to put a squeeze on newsprint supply.

It was also a time when government advertising was important for a
newspaper’s finances. There again, the government could decide where
to release government tenders and advertisements.

Apart from this, media owners had other businesses on which pressure
could be exerted.

These methods were used selectively but the very fact that they were
used suggests that the executive has never been comfortable with a
critical media.

Today, private corporations control much of the media. But despite
liberalisation, the government continues to have the power to put
pressure on the media through its owners. There is ample evidence to
show how this kind of indirect censorship has worked to suppress news,
or to ensure nothing too critical or damaging about the executive is
printed.

When and if powerful corporate houses choose to be critical of the
government of the day, they can use their media to go all out to
attack it. Note for instance the vociferous criticism by many media
houses of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his silence in the
face of corruption scandals and compare that to the fairly mild
comment on the current prime minister’s silence in the face of a
growing culture of public lynchings and cow vigilantism by people
affiliated to his party.

None of this is to justify the actions of this government. It is only
to put it in some perspective that all governments find a questioning
media inconvenient, one they must tolerate in a democracy, but one
they would ideally like to put in its place.

That NDTV is neck deep in financial trouble is well known. But when
raids take place, the dominant narrative is not that NDTV is one of
the few channels that has been consistently critical of this
government, but that its owners are involved in allegedly crooked
financial deals.

Uncomfortable ties
***This government has made no bones about the fact that it has little
time for the media unless it is willing to sing its praises. Its
unwillingness to face critical questioning is exemplified by the fact
that after three years in office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has not
addressed a single press conference.*** [Emphasis added.]

Party president Amit Shah has addressed the media, but his impatience
has been more than evident. At a press conference in Chandigarh last
month, he rudely told journalists to “shut up” and made no bones about
his intolerance of critical media questioning.

***This government has also shown its willingness to use the Central
Bureau of Investigation, its denials notwithstanding, to teach any or
all of its opponents a lesson. Whether these opponents are human
rights activists like Teesta Setalvad or others, the first step is to
call in the agency to investigate alleged financial misdemeanours.***
[Emphasis added.]

Predictably, the focus shifts to whether the individuals being
investigated are really involved in some illegality and not why some
individuals are being investigated and not others. Or to the real
message to critics behind such actions: we are watching you and will
find ways to silence you.

In the case of NDTV, it is clear that neither Narendra Modi nor Amit
Shah have forgotten the channel’s coverage of the 2002 Gujarat carnage
and the fact that it openly reported on the alleged complicity of the
state machinery in allowing the killings to continue. Modi was then
the state’s chief minister and Shah a minister in his government.
Also, Ravish Kumar, in his popular daily programme Prime Time on NDTV
India, has remained a relentless critic of the government and the BJP,
although he always manages to lace this with humour and sarcasm. Thus,
one would not put it past this government to find ways to cripple
NDTV, intimidate it, or shut it down altogether.

Given the cutthroat rivalry between media houses, it is unlikely that
any of them will raise this issue as one concerning freedom of the
press or circulate petitions supporting NDTV. All media houses are
vulnerable if their financial dealings are investigated. They cannot
take the chance of falling foul of this government.

***What we are witnessing today is the typical arrogance of a party
that believes it will rule all of India in the near future. Having won
the Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh in March, the BJP is riding
high. In its grand vision of a saffron-tinted India, there is no room
for a critical, adversarial media.*** [Emphasis added.]


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to