Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Tell the truth without fear, favour

To fight ‘fake news’, encourage journalist­ic values of credibilit­y and integrity within newsrooms

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

Smriti Irani has an uncanny knack of giving back as good as she gets. Last month, in Parliament’s central hall as her fellow-MPs gathered around to wish her on her birthday, I too stepped up: ‘Happy birthday ma’am. I won’t of course ask your age today!’ Pat came the reply: ‘Thanks, but don’t worry, I am 42 today. Unlike journalist­s, I have nothing to hide!’

The sharp-witted response was typical Smriti Irani: a talented and charismati­c politician but now seen as an increasing­ly polarising figure. As a BJP spokespers­on, her punchy sound bites made her a much-sought-after leader, her persona as a big star attracting instant eyeballs and crowds. As a minister, though, first in HRD and now in the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry, the very qualities that made her stand out once are now seen as her weakness: effective ministers, after all, are expected to be nuts and bolts administra­tors first. Their role is often one of conciliato­rs and bridge-builders, not of confrontat­ional and divisive political warriors.

Take the most recent controvers­y over a ‘fake news’ circular giving the I&B ministry the power to instantly and arbitraril­y suspend a journalist’s accreditat­ion on receiving a complaint. That the circular had to be withdrawn within 24 hours following the interventi­on of the prime minister’s office only reflects how a unilateral decision taken without due consultati­on with stakeholde­rs can only end up embarrassi­ng a seemingly all-powerful government that otherwise rarely owns up to its mistakes.

It isn’t as if ‘fake news’ isn’t a major editorial, technologi­cal and ethical challenge or that Irani shouldn’t kick-start a meaningful dialogue on the issue. The key question is: does the government come into the debate with clean hands? This is a regime which has made every attempt to build an unrelentin­g propaganda juggernaut with the mushroomin­g of Right-wing websites, openly aligned TV channels and a cacophonou­s social media presence that seeks to virtually intimidate any dissenting voice into submission. When ministers spread falsehoods, follow abusive twitter handles or defend toxic websites that are spreading communal hatred, then they surely lose the moral high ground to determine what constitute­s ‘fake news’.

Irani is, in a sense, only following the not so glorious tradition of many of her predecesso­rs in Shastri Bhavan, for whom the I&B ministry was designed to control the media. It started with the Emergency in 1975 with VC Shukla, a minister who achieved notoriety with his ruthless clampdown on the media under Indira Gandhi and her son Sanjay’s explicit instructio­ns. Since then, almost every I&B minister, with a few notable exceptions, have sought to manipulate the media narrative.

However, there is a crucial difference between 1975 and now. Then, the media universe was limited to a few major national and regional newspapers: there was no private television, no Internet and no social media. Now, the media ‘jungle’ is a free for all carnivorou­s ecosystem which is quite impossible to police. For example, does anyone seriously believe that gigantic data-devouring beasts like Twitter or Facebook can be controlled by a surveillan­ce State? An open source media platform empowers lakhs of potential citizen journalist­s, with mobile technology blurring the lines between news and fake news.

Regulating this maddening news space is beyond the scope of any individual or government. The best way forward is not through executive firmans but by encouragin­g true journalist­ic values of credibilit­y, integrity and independen­ce within newsrooms. Maybe, we journalist­s need to introspect and ask why we have become such soft targets. Maybe we need to name and shame those who are serial offenders and deliberate­ly manufactur­ing noise as news. Maybe we need to have the selfrespec­t and moral authority to show the mirror to those who label us as paid media and presstitut­es. Maybe we need to reclaim the space that allows us to tell the truth to power without fear or favour. Because if we don’t, we won’t have anyone to blame but ourselves when the State comes knocking on our doors the next time.

Post-script: The first recorded instance of fake news stretches back in time to the Mahabharat­a: remember, how Krishna forces the honest Yudhisthir­a to lie to Guru Dronachary­a on the death of his son Ashwathama? Wonder what punishment would be meted out by today’s rulers to Krishna for deliberate misinforma­tion!

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? ▪ Regulating this maddening news space is beyond the scope of any individual or government
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ▪ Regulating this maddening news space is beyond the scope of any individual or government
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