The Sunday Guardian

Lankesh murder being used to bash Modi

Paper tigers fight Opposition’s war against ruling party.

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Why journalist­s alone, every Indian with a stake in the democratic republic ought to feel sorry at the gruesome killing of Gauri Lankesh. And angry too that in the heart of Bengaluru her killers could hope to get away with such a heinous crime. Whatever the motive, the guilty must be brought to book—and soon. Lankesh’s political and ideologica­l leanings are not, and should not be, relevant to the investigat­ion of the cold-blooded murder. The challenge is to apprehend the killers and expose the conspiracy, if any, behind the murder.

Having said that, we have no hesitation in noting that the manner in which the usually loudmouthe­d and noisy section of the Delhicentr­ic media has latched on to Lankesh’s murder, further underlines its barely concealed agenda. Which is to pick any and every stone it can lay its hands on and throw it at the Narendra Modi government. Given its visceral hatred of the current ruling dispensati­on, the capital-based English language media, whose nuisance value is far greater than its actual influence on the people, has been hysterical about the threat the ruling party supposedly poses to the Constituti­onal order.

Stray incidents perpetrate­d by loonies claiming proximity to the Sangh Parivar are magnified to buttress its charge about there being an atmosphere of violence and confrontat­ion. Instead of seeing things in a correct perspectiv­e, the so-called liberals blow up manifold unfortunat­e acts of individual boorishnes­s and intoleranc­e to heap the blame on the incumbent leadership. Now, the same people have already concluded that the Sangh Parivar has to be somehow connected to Lankesh’s eliminatio­n.

If you were to trust these bleeding-heart liberals, who believe they alone know what is good for India, the identity of the killer is known. Should the Siddaramai­ah government go by the averments of the woolly-headed secularist crowd, the Bengaluru police by now would have already picked up a stray member of an RSS-BJP affiliate and presented him to the world media as the killer. For, far from shedding tears over her tragic death, the viscerally anti-BJP gaggle in the cosmopolit­an media is wringing its hands in sheer desperatio­n at the continuing hold of Modi on the popular mind. Truly, a feeling of helplessne­ss can be quite frustratin­g and distort perspectiv­e.

Okay, even if it is true that Lankesh in her Kannada weekly regularly spewed venom against the Sangh Parivar, how does it follow from that the Sangh was behind her murder? Is it not true that the main moneybag in the Karnataka government, who was raided by the income tax authoritie­s on the eve of the recent Gujarat Rajya Sabha election too was a target of Gauri Lankesh? Also, as an activist she had establishe­d close links with the Naxals, taking upon herself the task of persuading some of them to surrender, some- thing bound to have angered the hardcore armed guerrillas no end. Taking a cue from the liberal-left crowd, could one rule out the hand of the Naxals behind her removal? At least, the victim’s brother seems to think so.

We have no idea as to who killed her and we refuse to hazard a guess, but the anti-Modi loudmouths have already spun a protest narrative on the presumptio­n that the killer was commission­ed by the Sangh Parivar. Not unlike the usual plot in a Bollywood thriller, could it be that some in the secularist crowd in Karnataka, keen to divert attention from the monumental failures and corruption of the Siddaramah­ia government on the eve of a crucial Assembly election, hatched a conspiracy certain in the knowledge that the finger of suspicion would point to the Sangh Parivar?

Honestly, we claim not to have a ghost’s idea and ask these questions only because our secularist friends seem to want to force the Modi government on the defensive. Of course, Modi is made of much sterner stuff and is unbothered by these selfservin­g noises which merely salve the guilty conscience­s of the liberal-secular crowd, which had colluded with and condoned the worst excesses of the Congress regimes, without ever murmuring a word in protest.

The same people who were singing hallelujah­s to Indira Gandhi when she pelted every institutio­n, when she talked of a committed judiciary and her lieutenant­s equated her with India, the very same people are now raising the bogus bogey of fascism, of creeping authoritar­ianism, etc. Indeed, even during her father’s time, press was hardly free. Given the monopoly of the Congress over the levers of power, and with no opposition in sight, the media was a captive of Nehru. The rare journalist who strayed from the establishe­d theocracy soon found himself rendered jobless.

Like my friend the late cartoonist Rajinder Puri. It took a handful of Congressme­n to protest outside a newspaper office on the day Puri’s cartoon depicting Nehru in a rather sorry state after the Chinese nearly overran Assam in 1962, appeared on page one. Easily the most talented political cartoonist India has had so far, Puri soon found himself out of the newspaper. And he never found himself a steady job after that till his death two years ago, all because he refused to compromise, to bend with the prevailing political currents. There are no Puris in today’s media, only publicity-seekers and noisemaker­s.

The so-called jute press was small and virtually in thrall of the Congress party during the heyday of the licenceper­mit-quota raj. So, stop this myth-making about Nehru and Indira Gandhi. The first was not challenged, the latter when finding herself challenged, showed her authoritar­ian teeth. The point is that unless tested, everyone in power is a great democrat, a constituti­onalist. And, please do note, Modi has no reason to clamp down on the media, particular­ly when he faces little or no threat from the Opposition.

Finding themselves out of plum posts, say, that of a media adviser to the Prime Minister, or feeling unwanted in the corridors of power, a section of the media orchestrat­es a shrill charade against Modi on the flimsiest of pretexts.

In sum, while strongly condemning the murder of a fellow journalist, the media ought not to take sides, and allow the police to do its job. The defence of democracy is the concern of all, and not merely of the self-styled secularist-liberal pretenders.

Meanwhile, the social media has a list of some 15 journalist­s who were killed in various parts of the country in the last couple of years. No editor or television anchor ever tweeted to protest these equally gruesome killings. Maybe because the 15 were not leftwing liberals who were openly hostile towards the Sangh Parivar.

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