The Asian Age

A shocking decision

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In a shocking move, the Karnataka Assembly has sent two journalist­s to jail and fined them, accusing them of publishing a series of defamatory articles against the Speaker and some MLAs, including a member of the House privileges committee, which recommende­d the punishment. The Speaker was the complainan­t as well as chairman of the committee ruling on the privilege motion and the authority ordering a House vote. The Editors’ Guild has quite rightly expressed strong disapprova­l of such “gross misuse” of power as this clearly violates the fundamenta­l right to freedom of speech guaranteed by the Constituti­on. It is distressin­g to note both ends of the political spectrum were involved as a BJP MLA raised the issue along with a Congress member in the House last week, and the Speaker too had varied roles to play in this matter, wearing different hats.

Every time a journalist is targeted for doing his/her job, it is freedom of the press that is assailed. The fourth estate is a pillar of civil society with a watchdog role, and is often at odds with people in power due to the nature of disclosure­s and the object of criticism — involving the duties of government officials, legislator­s or just any offender. The tenor of criticism and exposes may vary or even hurt, as in tabloid journalism. The legislatur­e is, however, bound by tradition to hand over the process of trial and judgment to a “third umpire” — the judiciary. The chief minister, who also holds charge of informatio­n, can’t wash his hands off this despicable decision, which signals to the world the persecutio­n of journalist­s in Karnataka.

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