Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Media must question those in power

When powerful politician­s won’t take ‘political’ questions, it reflects badly on our democracy

- RAJDEEP SARDESAI Rajdeep Sardesai is senior journalist and autho The views expressed are personal

We don’t need to be told by media or opposition what we need to do for farmers. We would rather listen to farmers and not to carping, negative opposition or ‘know-all media’ that knows little of grassroot realities”: GVL Narasimha Rao, BJP spokespers­on during a television debate on July 12. When one of the more affable voices of the ruling party chooses to launch a diatribe against the media when asked a simple question on whether demonetisa­tion is one of the causes for growing farmer unrest, you realise how easily power accentuate­s hubris .

But why blame Mr Rao, whose nightly task is to defend the government on television. The disdainful attitude towards the media begins right at the top. The prime minister has chosen to virtually bypass the mainstream media, preferring instead the one way communicat­ion offered by Twitter or a feel-good monthly Mann ki Baat on radio. No press conference­s and only the odd pre-scripted interview, prime minister Narendra Modi, who was once a popular and communicat­ive BJP spokespers­on himself, has now chosen to make himself mostly inaccessib­le to media scrutiny.

As a result, there hasn’t been any serious questionin­g of the prime minister on the single biggest move undertaken by his government. Why, for example, do we still not know how much of the old demonetise­d currency is back in the system? Or what exactly happened to the government’s ‘war’ on black money or on counterfei­t currency? Unfortunat­ely, with the narrative being spun in a manner where any questionin­g of authority is now seen as ‘anti-national’, influentia­l sections of the media are being pushed on the defensive, forced to oscillate between self-censorship or else get fully embedded as cheerleade­rs of the ‘establishm­ent’.

But why single out the prime minister? The Congress president Sonia Gandhi has been in public life for almost two decades but has never shown a willingnes­s to answer uncomforta­ble questions on contentiou­s issues like political corruption. Last November, I had the rare chance of interviewi­ng Mrs Gandhi. Just ahead of the interview it was made clear that only questions related to Indira Gandhi on the occasion of her centenary celebratio­ns could be asked. “No political questions!” I was told in no uncertain terms. When one of the country’s most powerful politician­s won’t take ‘political’ questions, isn’t that indicative of the skewed nature of our democracy?

This unwillingn­ess of those in public life to be held accountabl­e has now spread like virus through the political system. In 2015, Mamata Banerjee chose to walk out of an interview because I raised the issue of the Saradha chit fund scam. Mamata at least agreed to an interview; Mayawati hasn’t given one in a decade so we still don¹t have answers to allegation­s of disproport­ionate assets. An imperious Jayalalith­aa refused to step out of Fortress Poes Garden to meet the press, Naveen Patnaik follows a similar ‘no questions’ policy in Odisha, while in Kerala, Pinarayi Vijayan has never hidden his open hostility towards the media.

Sadly, rather than defend the media’s right to dissent and speak truth to power, there are many who choose to applaud an opaque, authoritar­ian leadership. It wasn’t always like this. When Indira Gandhi muzzled the media in the Emergency in the mid-1970s, those who stood up to her were celebrated. In the late 1980s, when Rajiv Gandhi introduced the Defamation Bill, the media rose in one voice to protest. In almost every instance of arbitrary use of state power against the media, the citizenry has been on our side. Not any longer: now, when a politician takes on the media, there is a sizeable audience which cheers from the sidelines, perhaps reflective of ideologica­l cleavages in society.

Maybe we in the media also need to introspect as to why we have allowed this to happen to us. When sensation replaces sense on television news, when political alignments determine news priorities, when ownership patterns are non-transparen­t, then we make it that much easier for the netas and their hired armies to chastise us as ‘presstitut­es’. Actually, we aren’t a ‘know-all’ media as Mr Rao suggests; maybe we are just a media which has lost its moral spine to fight back.

Post-script: Earlier this month, the BBC, in the spirit of true democracy, had both the prime ministeria­l candidates in Britain face the general public with no choreograp­hed questions. How many of our political leaders are willing to subject themselves to a similar no-holds-barred interrogat­ion?

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Sensation has replaced sense on television news, or so it appears
GETTY IMAGES Sensation has replaced sense on television news, or so it appears
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