Thank you for the communication . I wholly
endorse the Petition .
  
  Niloufer Bhagwat
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Venugopalan K M 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, December 04, 2010 6:07 PM
  Subject: [humanrights-movement:3266] State Terrorism – Shahina Responds Mon, 
29/11/2010 - 12:50 — Shahina K K (Translated from the original in Malayalam)


  State Terrorism – Shahina Responds 

  Mon, 29/11/2010 - 12:50 — Shahina K K

  (Translated from the original in Malayalam)



  Investigating cases is the work of the police, and not of the media; I am 
under no misapprehension on that front. Yet when the stories circulated by the 
police challenge one’s basic common sense, it is possible that the media will 
conduct investigations in their own ways. This is nothing new. And this is what 
I do as part of my duty as a reporter for Tehelka.

  The Special Investigation team’s investigative report alleges that the PDP 
leader Abdul Naser Madani met, and conspired with, Tadiyantevila Nasir in the 
Lakkiri estate in Coorg which resulted in the Bangalore bomb blast. The charge 
sheet additionally alleges that these meetings took place also in Madani’s 
rented house in Kochi. The testimonial towards this end provided by the police 
is that of one Jose Varghese, native of Aluva, who owned this house. However, 
Jose had himself approached the court and refuted the fact of having given such 
a testimony to anyone.

  Another witness testimonial is that of Madani’s brother Mohammad Jamal, who 
used to be the person in charge of the centre for religious instruction  at 
Anwarsheri. The charge sheet alleges that Madani directed Jamal to create a 
hideout at Anwarsheri for some of the others involved in the bomb blast case.

  In fact, in response to this Jamal had given a statement to the contrary in 
the Kollam Shastankotta court stating that he had neither given such evidence, 
or indeed that the investigating team had ever even met him. Besides, above all 
else, it is noteworthy that Abdul Nasar Madani’s own political perspective in 
the last ten years has changed considerably. These were the circumstances that 
inspired me to investigate the reality of the ‘Kodagu stories’.

  It was on the 16th of last month that I visited Aigoor Panchayat in Kodagu. 
We travelled through Kumboor and Hoskote. I was under the impression that 
people there may not have been conversant in Malayalam. To that end I had taken 
someone along to help with translations. A common friend of his and mine 
accompanied us. A person from that area came along to help with directions. The 
place being a BJP stronghold there was a worry that people might not be 
forthcoming about directions and so on, and I might have had to return without 
accomplishing what one had set out for; this was the reason for taking along 
someone who knew the place very well.

  I am detailing all this information in order simply to refute the police 
charge that I was accompanied by a group of PDP activists. In the course of 
investigative reporting, a media person may have to take the help of any number 
of people. The police’s charge is nothing but an attempt to curb the freedom of 
the press.



  A couple of days after I returned the Hosthote Circle Inspector called me and 
wanted to know the details of the people who accompanied me. I made it clear 
that I would do so only if a court order to the effect enjoined me to do so.

  After another couple of days I realised that there was a case against me when 
some Karnataka based friends informed me of a press report about it. This was 
established as fact when some Kerala based journalist colleagues called the 
police to establish the veracity of this news.

  On our way back from meeting a prosecution witness for the Madani case, one 
Yogananda, we were apprehended by a police posse under the leadership of the 
Hosthote CI. After aggressively proclaiming that such things are not possible 
here, he demanded that we go to the Hosthote police station. Upon asking why we 
should do so, the police backtracked on this demand. In fact, when we were 
returning from there the police continued to follow us for some distance. After 
a while, we continued our journey in another vehicle.

  Late that night while I was returning from Kodagu the CI called to inform me 
that they suspected me of being a terrorist. This is the first time in my 
professional life that a police officer has called me directly and made such an 
allegation. He also wanted my chief editor’s number.

  I have not been sent any official notification relating to the case charges 
against me. Despite that, it needs to be acknowledged that this constitues a 
very dangerous precedent . A government that wishes to silence media 
investigators (and through that the larger public) through fear is actually 
destroying democracy.

  However, more than the manner in which the Karnataka police has dealt with 
this issue, I am disturbed by the way in which some of the newspapers in Kerala 
have dealt with this issue. Yesterday’s Kerala Kaumudi and Mathrubhumi have 
reproduced verbatim the lies fed to them by the police. It is shameful that a 
known media person is represented in the news as a ‘culprit’ without the papers 
conducting any investigations. Upon being telephoned, Mathrubhumi’s editor Sri 
Kesava Menon very politely responded, and expressed regret, regarding this 
matter.

  We know that the Chief Editor need not see every news item each day. He gave 
assurance that he would call the concerned reporter and issue a denial in 
today’s newspaper. In addition, the Bangalore correspondent of the Mathrubhumi 
also heard my version of the story. His defence was that he could not get hold 
of my number the previous day.  As the number was not available, apparently the 
news had to be given on the basis of  “pressure”. He did not have any answer to 
the question of whose pressure this was. It isn’t clear whether the pressure is 
the Karnataka police’s or the news desk’s, but I believe it cannot be the 
latter. This is because after so many years as a journalist I believe that no 
newspaper would insist on printing a report that had not been cross checked 
first.

  I have spoken to many prominent journalists regarding the police stories 
about Madani’s visit to Kodagu. All of them claim quite authoritatively that 
Madani did go there. They reiterate the police version as some incontrovertible 
truth.

  Since when have our journalists begun to treat the State as the authoritative 
representative source of news? I believe that news is in the people.They are 
also the biggest source of news. People will expose the conspiracies of the 
State. I believe that journalistic responsiblity lies in merely being carriers 
of this exposition.



  Shahina K.K.



  -- 


  You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a 
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the 
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
  -AMBEDKAR



  http://venukm.blogspot.com

  http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

  http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com



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