http://www.thehoot.org/web/home/story.php?storyid=3606&mod=1&pg=1&sectionId=10&valid=true#

*Nov. 26: What the print media missed out*


 How is it that no newspaper has bothered to send its reporters to simply
reconstruct what happened that night…and ascertain whether this matches with
the official version,  wonders KALPANA SHARMA in a new column.





*SECOND TAKE*

*Kalpana Sharma*







Almost two months after the November 26, 2008 terror attack on Mumbai, the
rantings against the media in general, and the electronic media in
particular, have virtually subsided.  The government too has sensibly pulled
back on its plan to impose a form of pre-censorship on the electronic media,
something that all members of the media have opposed.  Government control
can never be the solution to lack of responsibility by the media on any
issue.  That much, one hopes, has finally been acknowledged and settled.



But the weeks since the attack have shown up some other issues that should
concern us in the media and that need to be addressed.



For instance, in the aftermath of the 2006 train bombings in Mumbai, most
newspapers had follow up stories on the people who had been killed, the good
Samaritans who came forward to help, the role played by doctors and others
at the hospitals to tend to the wounded and the reports of eye-witnesses
describing what happened.



After the November attacks, some of this did happen in the initial couple of
weeks.  But since then, most of the writing has either been about the
confessions of the lone terrorist who was caught, the future of Indo-Pak
relations, the threats and counter-threats from both sides, and what needs
to be done to better equip the police.



In 2006, the Indian Express followed up each and every one of the 187 people
killed and ran stories about them and their families.  Later, these stories
were put together in a book.  This time round, barring The Hindu, which does
not have a Mumbai edition, none of the local newspapers have done this kind
of detailed follow-up.  The Times of India published a full list of those
who had been killed in the terror attack at Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, a
list that was released by the Central Railways.  Yet no one has followed up
on these 58 individuals except journalists from The Hindu.



Most Mumbai newspapers have carried stories about the policemen killed. But
why not of the civilians?



A full list of those killed in all the four locations has not been
published.  The dossier, prepared by the government and handed over to
diplomats from the countries whose citizens died, and sent to Pakistan, has
a list of the 26 foreign nationals who died.  It mentions that a total of
165 people were killed and 304 injured. But where is the list of the Indians
who died?



The two hotels at the centre of the attack, the Taj and the Trident, have
apparently refused to let journalists get a list of the members of their
staff who were either killed or injured or of the residents of the hotels
who died or were injured.  This kind of secrecy is inexplicable unless the
families of the staff or the guests have expressly asked that their names
not be made public.  If that were the case, the hotels should say so rather
than obfuscating. As a result, although some stories have appeared about a
couple of prominent businessmen and the journalist Sabina Sehgal Saikia,
there is little information about the others who died in these two
locations.



It is also a mystery why we know little or nothing about the other three, or
is it four, people who were killed at Nariman House.  There have been
several stories about the Rabbi and his wife who were killed, as well as of
their little son Moshe who survived.  But nothing is known of the other
people killed.



As a result, this is the first time after such an attack that people do not
have full details about all the people killed and injured, how many of the
latter have recovered, how many have received compensation etc.  Such
stories were routine on previous occasions.



Another striking aspect of the coverage is the lack of curiosity by the
media to reconstruct what exactly happened that night.  The official
version, as presented by Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram, sets out one
scenario.  But is all of it true?  Some discrepancies have been exposed by
the personal investigation conducted by Vinita Kamte, wife of the senior
police official Ashok Kamte who was shot down along with the head of the
Anti Terror Squad, Hemant Karkare and Vijay Salaskar near Cama Hospital. So
could there be other discrepancies?  How is it that no newspaper has
bothered to send its reporters to simply reconstruct what happened that
night, figure out how long it takes to travel by taxi from the point the
terrorists landed at the fishing colony in Colaba to the other locations
where they attacked and ascertain whether this matches with the official
version? Why do we hesitate to do this kind of investigation?  Is it because
in matters of terror, we are too afraid of challenging official wisdom for
fear of being called "anti-national"?



There are several other leads that the media has either suppressed, through
a kind of self-censorship, or has not considered pursuing.  The Mumbai
Mirror carried a disturbing front-page photograph on December 25, a day
short of one month after the attack, with a pixilated image of two bodies
inside a room.  The story claimed that the terrorists had forced some of the
foreigners to undress before shooting them and that the police had
photographic evidence of this.  The paper also claimed that it had seen all
these photographs but had refrained from publishing them.  Why then did it
publish this one?  Was it another effort to be sensational, or to show that
it had better contacts in the police than anyone else, or was this a hoax?  The
story disappeared without any follow up, without any explanation.  And no
other newspaper took it up either.  So the mystery remains.



The tendency of the media to rely entirely on police reports without
conducting its own investigation was shown up rather dramatically on the
question of how Karkare, Kamte and Salaskar were killed on their way from
Cama Hospital.  In the early versions, there was no explanation given about
why these three senior officials got into one vehicle and how they drove
directly into an ambush by the terrorists. Why did they get no warning?  Did
they not even fire back?  The official version contained no details and
seemed to suggest that they were caught off guard by the terrorists who shot
the three officers, threw their bodies out of the vehicle and drove off in
it towards the Oberoi.



It took Vinita Kamte to spend a month conducting her own investigation to
reconstruct what happened that night.  And it is she who has been able to
establish that her husband in fact did fire at Kasab, the surviving
terrorist, and injured him before being shot down and that this information
was available with the police.  She was also able to confirm that he fired
at the terrorists at Cama who then apparently fled from the hospital into
the lane behind it.  She has also found that although the police control
room had information that the two terrorists had left Cama, that information
was not relayed to the three senior officers who were working out strategy
outside the hospital¿s back gate.  Could the media not have found some of
this out?



The focus on the media¿s misdeeds in the coverage of the November 26 attack
has centered on the electronic media.  But the print media is not entirely
exempt.  In the past, if newspapers have done detailed follow up stories, it
is because their editors thought this was a worthwhile exercise and also
something that the media needed to do.  People killed in such attacks should
not remain anonymous, without names or faces.  It is the job of the media to
bring out the human dimension of such tragedies.  So the question we must
ask is why, barring one newspaper, have the rest thought that this time such
stories need not be done.

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