---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ahalya
Subject: Contacts for a freelance journalist: Some stories need to be told -
come what may. Will you facilitate?

Hi,

Priyanka is a former colleague and very good friend. If you have any
contacts in the media who would be interested in publishing her story, do
write/call her.


Warm regards,
Ahalya Naidu

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Priyanka Borpujari <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 2:32 PM
Subject: Some stories need to be told - come what may. Will you facilitate?
To: Ahalya Naidu <[email protected]>


Hi,

My name is Priyanka Borpujari and I am a freelance journalist based in
Mumbai. Correction: I am a struggling freelance journalist - struggling with
authorities to  let me in to the war zones on Central India, struggling with
persuading them that I am a journalist and writer even if I don't carry a
press card, struggling with having to return to Mumbai to try and get what I
saw and heard and felt and smelled published somewhere, struggling to earn a
living with what I love doing.

So, I am now headed to Orissa, specifically to Kalinganagar in Jajpur
district. Kalinganagar should have been in the limelight, but since it is
not, I have decided to go there to see the power that forbids the place from
coming into the limelight. A local journalist was telling me, "That place is
a jail. Nobody can go there or come out of it. Those who manage to get out
are picked by cops for questioning." Reason? Tata's steel plant which has
been proposed to be set up there. In 2006, 14 people were killed. This year,
as villagers protest to not let go of their meagre lands and livelihood into
the hands of the 'philanthropic' company, five people have died for lack of
timely medical aid. Goons are being sent to threaten the people; cops look
on. Have you read any of this in any of the newspapers or seen on TV
channels lately? I know you haven't, and hence I am going to bring out the
real stories.

But this is no scary landscape for me - I was in Dantewada before and after
the incident when 76 CRPF jawans were killed in am ambush with the Maoists.
God was kind and our roads were clear through the Dandakaranya forest,
although I can vividly remember the images of the blown up a bullet-proof
vehicle just few feet away from me. Of course, I am sure I was stepping on a
landmine and I was lucky that it was not detonated.

The purpose of this mail is not to boast of my heroics, but to let you know
that some of my experiences were published in The Times of India and DNA,
while I kept blogging too during my first visit to Dantewada. This time, I
would love to feel secure that once I return, a media publication would be
willing to give me some good column space to write what I see in Orissa. It
would be nice if you could let me know if there is any media house willing
to tell the untold stories and show the unseen images of what humans can do
to one another, for the love of greed.

I hope I am able to board the train for the 38-hour journey, with a secure
heart that yes, mainstream journalism isn't yet dead.

Thanks and regards,
priyanka borpujari
+91-9820741992
www.priyanka-borpujari.blogspot.com

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