https://scroll.in/article/895972/should-the-media-in-india-be-held-accountable-for-playing-stenographer-to-the-police

Why does most of the media play stenographer to the police and
investigative agencies?
The Isro case is the latest reminder of what the police-media nexus can do.

Why does most of the media play stenographer to the police and
investigative agencies?
Rajesh Talwar and his wife Nupur Talwar arrive at Dasna prison in a police
van in Ghaziabad on November 25, 2013. Subjected to a media trial after
they were charged with the 2008 murders of their daughter Aarushi and
domestic worker Hemraj, they were acquitted in 2017. | Prakash Singh/AFP

10 hours ago

Anjali Mody

The conviction rate for criminal cases in India is abysmally low. A
fraction of cases actually go to trial each year, of which less than 50%
result in a conviction. The conviction rate for people charged under
draconian laws like the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act is even worse.
On average 75% of cases that have gone to trial under this Act in the three
years ending 2016 have ended in acquittals.

What is worse is that lakhs of Indians spend years in jail before they
reach court only to be acquitted or have their cases thrown out. On
average, only a third of cases filed come to trial within a year. At any
point in time, close to 70% of India’s total jail population are
undertrials – people who have not been tried for the crimes they are
accused of committing and have not got bail.

These numbers should make any self-respecting reporter sceptical about
police claims about its criminal investigations, and cautious about
reporting the police version of investigations, arrests and incarcerations.
Yet, media reports of police investigations appear to suggest that the
police are doing a stellar job of putting away criminals and terrorists.
Scepticism and caution are exceptions in the Indian media. Even a word like
“alleged”, which is deployed to minimally acknowledge that under the law a
person is innocent until proven guilty, does not seem to be part of the
vocabulary of many journalists. Neither does it seem to be required by
their editors.

The police version
At its most benign, the media simply reports the police version. For
example, in a sequence of reports on the murder of a primary school student
in a private school in Gurugram, near Delhi, in November, the India Today
group reproduced the changing, even contradictory, police versions as they
were delivered with no apparent application of mind. In one of its first
reports, it named a school bus conductor as the accused and stated that he
was a child sexual abuser. This was proved to have been based on falsehoods
– the conductor was innocent, but has been left unemployed. The media
group’s website went on to publish a report on the student who was
subsequently named as the accused, giving details about his alleged sexual
proclivities.

At its most toxic, television and newspapers conduct a media trial such as
the one in the case relating to the 2008 murders of Arushi Talwar and
Hemraj. That their real killers were never caught and brought to trial does
not seem to concern the media, which reproduced and even imaginatively
reconstructed the fantastical claims made by the agencies investigating the
case.

When a trial does end, as it often does, with the police version torn to
shreds, the media reports the verdict and moves on. It takes no
responsibility for the role it played in allowing the police to get away
with a shoddy or corrupt investigation. There is also no mechanism, save
the courts, to hold the media to account. But no one dragged through the
courts on false charges is likely to want to go down the route of fighting
a defamation case.

Scientist Nambi Narayanan.
Scientist Nambi Narayanan.
Police and media
For example, while reporting on the Supreme Court’s September 14 decision
to award compensation to former Indian Space Research Organisation
scientist Nambi Narayanan in the fake “Isro spy case”, the media failed to
mention the role it played (with one solitary exception) in propping up the
police case and systematically destroying the lives and careers of
Narayanan and his supposed co-conspirators. The Isro case is a terrifying
example of what the police-media nexus can do, and the Supreme Court
spelled it out. It was compensating Narayanan for “wrongful imprisonment,
malicious prosecution, humiliation and defamation”. The only positive spin
that can possibly be put on Narayanan’s story is that it is an example of
the triumph of the human spirit over the forces of darkness. Despite the
complete erasure of his life as he knew it, he soldiered on in expectation
of justice.

There has been some talk about the necessity of holding to account the
police officers involved in setting up the Isro spy case. Astonishingly the
media’s lack of accountability, its willingness to publish every canard
that it was fed, and its spectacular self-assurance that it would never be
held to account have barely found mention.

In his recent book, Breaking News, former Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger
recounts an early lesson in the rules of journalism from the chief reporter
of the first newspaper he worked in. He wrote: “He explained that police
work involved keeping one foot on the pavement and one in the gutter. You
got their respect by kicking them in the balls at regular intervals,
because, in the long run, they needed us more than we needed them. That, he
emphasised, was a good rule applicable to all those in authority…He
repeated this often in case I had failed to grasp it: they needed us more
than we needed them. We owned the printing presses; they didn’t.”

The relationship between the police (and increasingly the rest of the
establishment too) and the vast majority of reporters in India is the exact
reverse of what Rusbridger’s chief reporter so colourfully described as the
ideal. The relationship between reporters, especially those covering the
police, and their interlocutors is one of subservience. Anyone who has
worked in a mainstream media newsroom will be able to testify that
reporters are daily heard saying to their establishment contacts, “Sir,
give me a story… you must have something for me…” Reporters mostly report
on what is handed to them.

In 2007, Mumbai lawyer Rahul Thakur filed a public interest litigation in
the Bombay High Court seeking to limit the details the police could share
with the media prior to filing a chargesheet. Thakur was provoked into
action by his experience of representing tens of ordinary people who were
arrested for crimes they had not committed, and whose lives were ruined by
the infamy that media reports brought them. Apart from reporting the police
version as true, the media ignored the presumption of innocence, published
photos of the accused persons and dissected their personal lives for the
public to judge, long before the case was brought to trial. But, clearly
mindful of issues pertaining to freedom of expression, the petition was not
seeking limits on what the media could report.

The police in India are seen to have concluded a successful investigation
once an arrest is made and a chargesheet filed. That the majority of cases
the police files fall apart in court makes no difference to their careers
or prospects. The quality of investigations and conviction rates are not a
consideration for their Annual Confidential Reports – for appraisals – and
annual state awards they may receive. The police are one part of the
criminal justice system, but they do not seem to be terribly concerned with
the justice part of it.

In 2014, the Bombay High Court, in response to the 2007 plea, issued a
circular ordering the police and prosecution to not share any information
pertaining to the identity of an accused and the line of investigation,
until a chargesheet – the legal case made against the accused and accepted
by the court as the basis of trial – was filed. Similar circulars have been
issued from time to time by different courts across the country, and have
largely been ignored. Earlier this month, the Bombay High Court bench
monitoring the much-delayed investigation into the murder of rationalists
Narendra Dabholkar and Govind Pansare criticised the drip-drip of
information the police feeds the press. “What is this everyday hue and
cry?” Justice Satyaranjan Dharmadhikari asked. “What is all this coming in
the press? At whose instance?”Dharmadhikari said that the police were
“showing total lack of maturity”. He had harsher words for the media,
saying it “...does not know its responsibility…Media does not know that
presumption of innocence is a human right.” The court reporter of the
city’s largest circulating newspaper called the judge’s comments a “tirade”.

Maharashtra Additional Director General of Police Param Bir Singh (left)
addresses a press conference on the arrest of rights activists in the Bhima
Koregaon case in Mumbai on August 31. (Photo credit: PTI).

The Urban Naxal narrative
In the case of lawyers and activists Arun Ferreira, Gautam Navlakha, Sudha
Bharadwaj, Vernon Gonsalves and Varavara Rao – arrested by the Maharashtra
police from Thane, Delhi, Faridabad, Mumbai and Hyderabad – on August 28,
the police not only briefed the press, but provided them printouts of what
they claimed were incriminating documents, allegedly taken from the laptops
of the activists. At a massive press conference in Pune, the Additional
Director General of Police Param Bir Singh read out some of these purported
emails, which he claimed revealed a massive conspiracy to foment violence
at Bhima Koregaon, create a “Kashmir-like situation” across the country and
blow up Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the same manner as Rajiv Gandhi
was. The Bombay High Court pulled up the state police for this press
conference. “How can the police do this?” it asked. “The matter is
sub-judice. The Supreme Court is seized of the matter. In such cases,
revealing information pertaining to the case is wrong.” This, however, did
not stop the police from continuing to give reporters leading information
and printouts of the purported emails.

The media, with a few notable exceptions, reproduced the police version of
the arrests and the so-called evidence the police shared with them, without
asking any questions. Large sections of the media also embellished the
police version, heightening the drama of the arrests, by using the term
“urban Naxal” to describe the activists. This is a term that has clearly
been propagated by the BJP government in its effort to stigmatise its
critics and political opponents. The media, as it has done many times
before, has given the police a platform from which to try and create a
public mood favourable to its claims, to subvert the presumption of
innocence and declare those arrested guilty on the basis of calculated
misinformation, rumour and innuendo.

In his dissenting judgement on the arrests Justice Chandrachud noted this
corrosive use of the media by the police and its impact on lives and
reputations of those caught up in such cases. He said, “…The use of the
electronic media by the investigating arm of the State to influence public
opinion during the pendency of an investigation subverts the fairness of
the investigation. The police are not adjudicators nor do they pronounce
upon guilt. In the present case, police briefings to the media have become
a source of manipulating public opinion by besmirching the reputations of
individuals involved in the process of investigation. What follows is
unfortunately a trial by the media.”

The media’s role in this most recent case is entirely in character. When a
case is said to involve alleged acts of political subversion, sedition or
terror, the media is at its most toxic. Its toxicity is conveniently
wrapped in the national flag.

The media spares no one – as journalist Iftikhar Gilani discovered, not
even its own. In 2002, Gilani was arrested under the Official Secrets Act
on entirely fabricated charges, jailed and tortured for seven months. On
the day of his arrest Gilani and his wife watched on TV inside their home
as reporters standing outside claimed he was absconding, and that the
police had found incriminating evidence on his laptop (he did not have a
laptop). In the days that followed, newspapers reported as fact what the
police leaked to them: that Gilani had evaded lakhs of rupees in tax, had
illegal foreign currency in his home, had foreign bank accounts and was an
informant for a terror organisation. Even newspapers not reporting against
him seem to have failed to do basic fact checks, reporting incorrectly that
he was the India resident editor of two Pakistani newspapers.

Gilani’s crime was that he had unearthed and reported on corruption
involving the Intelligence Bureau in Kashmir. The case against him was a
blatant abuse of State power. The so-called “secret” documents laid against
him by the police and Intelligence Bureau were published reports available
in public libraries. The majority of the news media not only ignored the
facts, but also the presumption of innocence. It presented Gilani as an
anti-India spy and worse to their unsuspecting readers and audiences.

While weighing in on police leaks and media reporting of police leaks,
Justice Dharmadhikari had said: “It is a very boring, long, tedious,
arduous road from being an accused to a convict.” The slowness of the
judicial process, which favours delayers, plays a major part in this. On
average, trials in India are completed in only 13% of cases filed annually.
The rate of conviction is around 45%.

The police does not have to travel this long, tedious and arduous road. The
police have no incentives apart from personal morality or professional
self-esteem to behave differently. Up and down the line, police officials
are rewarded for investigations that have been completed and not penalised
if those investigations fall apart in court or prove to have been fanciful
or malicious or both.

But why does much of the media play stenographer to the police’s maleficent
flights of fancy? The only explanation is that perhaps, by and large, the
Indian media sets itself very low standards. It is the determination of the
very few – mostly smaller circulation newspapers, the independent new media
and a rare TV channel – that helps shine a light on the rot in the system.
The rest are part of the rot.
-- 
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