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Liberty of Indian Media at risk

On one hand, the journalists are facing increasing violence, no job guarantee, lobbyism, political patronage, internal issues, and on the other hand, many unions, clubs, and associations are mushrooming with the claim to protect the rights of journalists. Many journalists were victims of violence. In fact, India ranks ninth in a list of the twenty deadliest countries for journalists. Nine journalists have died in the last four years and many face death threats on a regular basis. Political correspondents exposing corruption pay the highest price. These days even the job of a journalist is decided by political groups, no one is independent in his/her expression. A country where journalist needs basic dignity, there having so many unions are of no use. If you look at the data, these unions just protested or mourned for the journalist who landed in casualty but they could hardly create any pressure on the government or safeguard the scribe. Media is the fourth pillar of democracy and it cannot be trodden. There was a campaign on social media called #journalismwithoutfear, they asked the media people to share their story of courage and how they kept going in the face of fear. Their aim was to make India a better and safer place for journalists. What happened after that campaign?? Some noise for some time, and now everyone has almost forgotten about it. More disturbingly, India features in the list of 13 high-impunity countries where a tremendously large proportion of such murders have remained unsolved, according to a 2016 CPJ report. Most journalists who have been murdered for their work covered politics and corruption. Another community, which has been targeted, is that of Right to Information (RTI) activists. Death is the ultimate price journalists, writers, and whistleblowers pay for challenging powerful vested interests or for expressing dissent. And while such murders represent the most extreme form of attack on journalists and writers, less extreme forms of attacks such as death threats and abuses are common. The advent of social media has only worsened the problem, with women journalists facing the brunt of the attacks on social media. When journalists raise such issues, they are often told that the rise in such abuses or attacks at least partly reflects the declining credibility of the Indian media.

However, the rising reach of Indian media over the past few decades has been accompanied by greater trust in it, data from successive rounds of the World Values Survey show. It is nobody’s case that Indian journalists are infallible, but the long-term trends suggest that their credibility has been rising over time.

As the charts illustrate, trust in the Indian media has risen sharply since the mid-1990s, when state monopoly over the broadcast news medium was broken. Confidence in the press was higher in India than in several other countries surveyed, the data show, as we reached to 2019, media completely lost its credibility and it remained a political mouthpiece. India has hardly been a harbour for journalists.

From the past five years, reporters and editors have faced harassment, pressure, and threats from vested interests in the government as well as private ones. A number of them have even been killed for performing their duty or voicing an opinion. No wonder India is the third-most dangerous place to be a journalist, behind war-torn Iraq and Syria. Women journalists become ‘soft targets’ while exposing the intolerance of others’ views. The freedom of expression by the Press needed legal protection in the current climate of intimidation of presspersons. The media must be the watchdog, the mediator between the leaders and the public. The mainstream media’s independence currently being questioned, and see how ultra-nationalism has dominated the political narrative, refusing to accept dissent. In recent years the media has also lowered the quality of India’s public dissertation. Media expansion has led to a shrinking of the public sphere, resulting in the spread of elitist and socially conservative values.

The media is divided in religion, caste and creed, some publication house and media channels go random against minorities, and some claim to be leftists and attack Hindu upper class in this era of journalism. Dalit magazines turn the spotlight on India’s low-caste plight. The readers too are divided into these lines. Apart from these divisions, some media houses got mortgaged to powers. The true test of a vigorous democracy is the independence of its media. Over the past few years, our media has become the mouthpiece of the party in power. Coupled with the fact the corporate owners of media houses share close links with the government, the Indian media have tragically lost its voice.

Serious issues like the beef ban, the crisis in Kashmir, dissent in universities and even the unrest in societies where Dalits – the lowest level of India’s caste system – have been discriminated or killed, have received scant mention in media coverage. Still, there hasn’t been a bigger debate about why the media has failed to effectively perform the critical tasks it’s supposed to do in a representative democracy. In such situations, what can be the role played by the unions and associations? India has over 400 news channels in various languages and another 150 channels are awaiting clearance. The South Asian country also has tens of thousands of newspapers and magazines. But the quality of Indian journalism is poor, as evidenced by the fact India ranks 136 among 180 countries in the index compiled by Reporters Without Borders, an NGO.

When it comes to press freedom, India fares worse than even countries like Afghanistan and the United Arab Emirates. Over the last few years, especially after Prime Minister Narendra Modi won the general election of 2014, the Indian mainstream media has allowed itself to be undermined by the unmatched political power that he represents. In fact, given the current state of how the mainstream media works it will be difficult to expose tweaked data and opacity in government functioning. A new note of muscular nationalism has crept into media discourse. Also, prominent are the curbing of dissent and the rise of the surveillance state – developments that bode ill for the independence of the Indian media. If you notice, why we don’t see much criticism in the media is that the government, in the person of the Prime Minister, has the ability to completely dominate the media’s agenda, by saturating the public and media sphere with the message, image, and his voice. Therefore, the media is bound to only react to the news agenda offered by the government, rather than investigate its activities independently. Read any big newspaper there are hardly any bylines, some newspapers have dropped writing editorials, some newspapers randomly publish news provided by DGIPR or Press Trust of India, they do not get in investigative stories. What more do you expect when the media industry is dominated by such big players of the corporate industry and political parties? Some prominent Indian media are now the B team of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Modi government. The increasing liberty of the ‘Hindutva brigade’ as he termed it, of attacking those that did not conform to its ideology of hate and intolerance and targeting of minority communities. Sections of the media help in spreading the mindset. When media is in mafia hands be it political or corporal, how can these mushrooming unions change the plight of the fraternity?


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Per day 400 flights affected; Air India facing loss of Rs 5-7 crore

air india
Image Courtesy: cnbctv18.com (File Pic)

After Balakot airstrikes on February 26, Pakistan banned its airspace for all Indian flights. Pakistan on Wednesday extended this ban from May 30 to June 15. Around 400 flights per day are affected due to the closure of Pakistani airspace. Several Central Asian airlines providing connectivity to Europe and the United States from Southeast Asia were forced to cancel their flights due to the ban. On account of this Air India is facing a daily loss of Rs 5-7 crore as its flights towards Europe and the US are forced to take a longer route. Moreover, these flights make a stop en route for refuelling. The longer routes required to avoid flying over Pakistan are compelling airlines to burn more fuel and money. In the meantime, fuel for international flights became 2.5% more expensive.

IndiGO launched its longest route Delhi-Istanbul on March 20. But instead of being a direct flight as planned, the closure of Pakistan airspace has forced it to operate with a fuelling stop, which forces IndiGo to burn an extra 2,500-3,000 kg of fuel each way.

SpiceJet’s flights between Delhi and the Gulf have been affected. Its Delhi-Kabul flight has been cancelled since the closure of the airspace.

These flights can no longer operate non-stop and have had to stop at either Sharjah or Vienna to refuel. Each refuelling halt, mandatory on both the outbound and return legs, costs the airline Rs. 50 lakh on an average. With the airline having to position crew and engineers in Vienna, Air India has lost approximately Rs. 60 crore till March 16.

The government-owned Airports Authority of India (AAI) operates 126 airports and civil enclaves out of a total of 449 airports and airstrips located throughout India. 100 airports/aerodromes receive regular commercial flights. The cities of Bengaluru, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kochi and Mumbai are served by privately (or joint-venture) operated airports. Airports in India handled over 341 million passengers in 2018. India is the third largest domestic civil aviation market in the world behind the US and China.

Bitterness between Mamata-Modi continues; Didi not to attend swearing-in ceremony

Mamata 1533058265
File Photo

The Lok Sabha elections are over but the bitterness between the chief minister of West Bengal Mamata Banerjee and the prime minister of India Narendra Modi still goes on. When PM Modi sent the invitation to Mamata Banerjee for his swearing-in ceremony and she accepted that, it seemed the democracy of India became stronger. But suddenly the mood of Mamata alias Didi changed and she decided not to attend the swearing-in ceremony of PM Modi.

Mamata Banerjee tweeted that the allegation of the BJP is untrue that 54 BJP workers were murdered in political violence in Bengal. Mamata Banerjee had on Tuesday confirmed her presence at the ceremony to be held on May 30.

She also accused the ruling party at the centre of trying to humiliate other political party and take political mileage through such ceremony. She wrote on Twitter, “So I am sorry, Narendra Modi ji, this has compelled me not to attend the ceremony. The ceremony is an august occasion to celebrate democracy, not one that should be devalued by any political party which uses it as an opportunity to score political points. Please excuse me.”

Mamata banerjee cancels swearing ceremony
Image Courtesy: Twitter

It is remarkable that the just concluded Lok Sabha polls witnessed a heated verbal duel between PM Modi and Mamata Banerjee who spearheaded the campaigns of their parties in West Bengal. The BJP made deep inroad in the bastion of Mamata Banerjee. The party won 18 seats of the state’s 42 seats which is just four less than the total seats bagged by TMC. Yesterday, three TMC MLAs and over 50 councillors joined the BJP. It was a big jolt to Mamata Banerjee.

Arun Jaitley cites health issues, urges PM to keep him out of new cabinet

arun jaitely
Image Courtesy: PrimeTimes.in (File Pic)

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who is close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Wednesday opted out the new cabinet citing his health condition.

“I am writing to you to formally request you that I should be allowed a reasonable time for myself, my treatment and my health and, therefore, not be a part of any responsibility, for the present, in the new government,” Jaitley wrote in a letter to the Prime Minister who is working on his new cabinet to be sworn-in tomorrow.

The 66-year-old BJP leader, who was absent from Friday’s Union Cabinet meeting, said he would “undertake any work informally to support the government or the party”.

The BJP leader further wrote, “During the last 18 months, I have had some serious health challenges. My doctors have enabled me to emerge out of most of them. After the campaign had concluded and you were leaving for Kedarnath, I had orally informed you that even though I was able to discharge the responsibilities assigned to me during the campaign, I would in future, for some time, like to keep away from any responsibility.”

Jaitley, owing to his health, was not seen at the victory celebrations at the BJP headquarters after the party stormed to power with a massive victory on 303 seats.

He has not been seen in public in the last few days, however, Jaitley did take a meeting of top Finance Ministry officials at his residence recently.

“Hon’ble Prime Minister, It was a great honour and a learning experience for me to have been a part of the Government led by you for the past five years. Even earlier, the Party had blessed me with responsibilities in the first NDA Government, in the Party organisation and also while we were in the Opposition. I could not have asked for more,” his letter to the Prime Minister read.

He continued: “This will enable me to concentrate on my treatment and health. The BJP and the NDA, under your leadership, have secured a spectacular win.”

Narendra Modi along with his cabinet will be sworn-in at Rashtrapati Bhavan on Thursday evening.

Modi 2.0 Govt: More US investment in India; Rupee to improve against Dollar

modi govt 2 0

After being put in currency monitoring list in 2018, foreign investors pulled their money from India.

The Trump administration has removed India from its currency monitoring list of major trading partners. Now, American investors can invest more in India. Moreover, the fall of the Indian currency rupee against the dollar is expected to be ceased. It is good news for the newly elected Modi government that enters its second consecutive term this month. Narendra Modi is going to take oath tomorrow as the PM.

It is worth mentioning that after being put in the currency monitoring list last year, the foreign investors pulled their money from India during the first six months. The value of rupee depreciated 7 per cent against the dollar. The foreign, particularly American investors decide to invest in any country according to this list. This list decides investment in under scanning countries is how much risky or beneficial.

The United States said that some of its major concerns are addressed by India. Switzerland is the other nation that has been removed by the US from its currency monitoring list. But China, Japan, South Korea, Germany, Italy, Ireland, Singapore, Malaysia, and Vietnam are still on this list.

India for the first time was placed by the US in its currency monitoring list of countries with potentially questionable foreign exchange policies in May 2018 along with five other countries China, Germany, Japan, South Korea, and Switzerland. In its next report in October 2018, the Treasury had said that India has made improvements and its name would be removed from the currency manipulation list in the next report. India maintains ample reserves according to the IMF metrics for reserve adequacy, it said.

However, the US continued to keep China on its watchlist, while urging the communist nation to take necessary steps to avoid a persistently weak currency. “Treasury continues to urge China to take the necessary steps to avoid a persistently weak currency,” said US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in a statement.

In a major change, Customs’ to ensure foreigners accused of smuggling face speedy prosecution

international ariport
Image Courtesy: Agency

The customs department has made a major change in the existing guidelines to ensure foreigners accused of smuggling do not run away and face speedy prosecution in India, an official said on Wednesday.

The move came as the government was informed about the steep rise in cases of outright smuggling of gold and foreign currency by foreign nationals.

“It was brought to the notice of the government that these accused persons have no interest/assets in India, and once released on bail, they are not available to face trial,” the customs official said, quoting an official order in this regard.

Therefore, service of show cause notice by a designated court to these foreigners becomes difficult, thus delaying the prosecution process, he said.

The matter was examined and it has been decided to modify guidelines issued in 2015 on launching of prosecution.

“Further, in cases involving foreign national(s), the prosecution may be launched at the earliest, even before issuance of the show cause notice,” the order said.

Normally, the prosecution is launched immediately on completion of adjudication proceedings, it said.

“However, in respect of cases involving offences relating to items, viz. gold, foreign currency, fake Indian currency notes, arms, ammunition and explosives, antiques, art treasures, wildlife items and endangered species of flora and fauna, prosecution may preferably be launched immediately after issuance of show cause notice under the Customs Act, 2916,” the order said.

The change in the existing guidelines will ensure that the foreigners accused of smuggling face the law, the customs official said.

“It really becomes very difficult to chase these accused foreigners once they have got bail in the offence allegedly committed by them as they do not have much stake or asset in India. The latest modification in the existing guidelines will also help in ensuring speedy prosecution process for these foreign nationals,” he said.

There has been an increase in the cases of smuggling via the Delhi airport.

A total of 340 cases of gold smuggling, an increase of 58 per cent as compared to the cases filed in 2017, were registered by the customs in 2018, according to a customs department data.

In these cases, 402.48 kilograms of gold, valuing over Rs 110 crore, were seized and 262 people arrested, it said.

There were 57 cases of smuggling of foreign currencies during the year, in which forex worth Rs 22.27 crore were seized. A total of 38 people were arrested in these cases, the customs department data said.

In 2017, there were 215 cases of gold smuggling at the Delhi airport. The customs officials seized 242.5 kilograms of the yellow metal in these cases and arrested 143 people.

In 35 cases of forex smuggling in 2017, a total of 18 people were arrested and foreign currencies worth Rs 10.75 crore seized.

Some of the foreign nationals were arrested in these cases of smuggling, according to the customs officer.

Letters to the Editor: 29 May, 2019

FEATURE LETTER DIARY 679x400 e1553672678487

History distorted and re-written in Rajasthan textbooks

It refers to shocking news about Congress-government in Rajasthan confusing school-children by brain-washing their minds through its pseudo-secular decision to remove Veer from the name of Veer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar in school text-books.

It seems being Hindu is a sin in the regime of pseudo-secular parties including Congress. Veer was removed from the name of Veer Savarkar perhaps only because he also once led Hindu Mahasabha after being released from jails during the British regime in India. It is the same Congress which wrongly pre-fixed monarchy-suffixes Shreemant and Rajmata in roads named in New Delhi after its leader Madhavrao Scindia and his mother Vijaya Raje Scindia.

Nobody can forget a capsule with totally distorted history submerged in the earth before Red Fort in Delhi during emergency-era of 1975-77 by the then Congress-regime at the centre, which was taken out by successive regime when the party was rooted out of power in the year 1977.

Congress government in Rajasthan must not play with history and should undo the wrong done by re-inserting Veer in name of Vinayak Damodar Savarkar by taking action against those who made such a blunder. Congress must not forget that time has changed making its top leaders visiting temples during on-going poll-campaign for Lok Sabha.

Subhash Chandra Agrawal

 

Wishing Arun Jaitley speedy recovery 

Arun Jaitley is unwell which is the reason why he did not contest elections and not visible in poll campaigning. He is the brainchild of Modi’s strategist planning team and we wish him a speedy recovery and good health. Arun Jaitley has been suffering from medical issues of late and Piyush Goyal had to replace him in his absence even for the interim budget. Jaitley deserves a well-earned break as health is the real wealth in life.

He should perform the role of a ‘mentor’ in Modi’s new government and should retire from active day to day politics. An economist like a young Rathin Roy who has been quite vociferous with deep knowledge about the structural problems faced by our country and who is also the member of PMEAC should replace him as the next Finance Minister of our country. With the Indian economy in the doldrums, we need an economist than a politician to be the next Finance Minister of the country!

S.N. Kabra 

 

Congress-NCP bastion falls

The 17th Lok Sabha elections saw the NCP-Congress bastion falling down miserably as BJP swept parliamentary elections in northern and western India this time. The revival of NCP-Congress coalition is running out of ideas and we saw them losing their seats miserably and that too with a huge margin of defeat. The fate of Congress-NCP in the state is bleak and its fortunes in the assembly election are not rousing as such at the present moment.

C.K.S. Ramani


(The views expressed by the author in the article are his/her own.)
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PM assures “complete cooperation” to Odisha CM Patnaik

naveen patnaik

Naveen Patnaik, 72, took oath as the Chief Minister of Odisha for a record fifth time on Wednesday. The Governor of Odisha Ganeshi Lal administered the Oath of Office to the new chief minister at the Exhibition Ground in Bhubaneswar. Eleven Cabinet ministers and nine Ministers of State were also sworn in. It is notable that Naveen Patnaik’s Patnaik’s Biju Janata Dal (BJD) won 112 seats in 147-membered Odisha assembly. The BJD has been in power in Odisha since 2000.

Just after the swearing-in ceremony, Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Naveen Patnaik. He assured Patnaik complete cooperation from the centre in Odisha’s progress. PM Modi is also re-elected for a second term after securing a landslide victory in the Lok Sabha elections. In his congratulatory tweet said, “Congratulations to Shri Naveen Patnaik Ji on taking oath as Odisha’s Chief Minister. Best wishes to him and his team in fulfilling the people’s aspirations. I assure complete cooperation from the Centre in working for Odisha’s progress”

Naveen Patnaik had invited PM Modi for the swearing-in ceremony. But he did not attend the function. Earlier this month, PM Modi had praised Naveen Patnaik’s handling of Cyclone Fani after reviewing the damage after the storm that killed over 40 people in the state.

Peace brings happiness in the world

earth peace world
Image Courtesy: Nerdymates.com

International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers 2019 is observed on May 29. The International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers is a tribute to people who serve or have served in UN peacekeeping operations. The peacekeepers are honoured for their high level of professionalism, dedication, and courage. People who died for peace are also remembered. United Nations Organisation is the outcome of the desire of the world people. Peacemaking is necessary and important in cases of protracted violence that do not seem to burn themselves out and in cases where war crimes and other human devastation demand the attention of outside forces. Over 70 years, over 1 million men and women have served under the UN flag. Today, more than 100,000 troops, police, and civilian personnel from 125 countries serve in 14 peacekeeping operations on four continents. World peace is defined as an ideal of freedom, peace, and happiness among and within all nations and/or people.

UN peacekeeping operations mark the Day by strengthening bonds with the local populations that they have been deployed to serve. The UN is working for world peace by persuasion, conciliation, arbitration and by fighting against the culprit country in acute case. Without peace, a nation cannot make any progress. So peace is ever desirable. However, nowadays, if there be no peace, the whole human race will be destroyed because modern war involves an atom bomb and the hydrogen bomb. So, war should always be avoided for world peace. Peace can never be achieved by one-dimensional and unilateral talks or efforts.

On would find that even today there have been present several hindrances in way of securing a stable, healthy and enduring peace. Yet the international community fully realised the supreme importance of the virtue of peace against the evil of war only after having suffered the most unfortunate and highly destructive two World Wars in the first half of the 20th century. The blood-soaked shreds of humanity that lay scattered in several hundred battlegrounds, particularly on the soils of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, cried for peace, peace, and peace on the earth.

Panchsheela was conceived as a powerful weapon against war. The five principles of Panchsheela constitute an important and historic event in the history of international relations. The Panchasila or the five points propounded by Jawaharlal Nehru has been accepted by many countries for world peace. The five points are (1) mutual respect for one another’s territorial integrity and sovereignty. (2) non-aggression, (3) non-interference in one another’s internal affairs for any reason of economic, political or ideological character, (4) equality and mutual benefit,  (5) peaceful co-existence. India and the other non-aligned countries together have organized to peace-area.

The human consciousness then rallied in the Charter of the United Nations to affirm. “We the people of the United Nations determined to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to humankind and to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security have resolved to combine our efforts to accomplish these aims.”

Ever since the achievement of independence, India has been assiduously striving for the promotion of peace. She has unbounded faith in peace. She believes that peaceful conditions alone can hold out any hope for the deliverance of mankind from the rut of so many ills it is at present plagued with.

Mahavir Swami and Gautama Buddha tirelessly preached against all kinds of violence. Their teachings were not heeded but also acted upon by Indian emperors. Mahatma Gandhi has said that “Peace will not come out of a clash of arms but out of justice lived and done by unarmed nations in the face of odds.” Hence, world peace is more essential not only for India’s economic development but also for the economic development of all the backward countries of the world. Peacemaking should be purposeful and positive.


(The views expressed by the author in the article are his/her own.)
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Will Imran attend swearing-in ceremony of PM Modi?

imran khan narendra modi exchanges goodwill message
File Photo

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has not invited Pakistan’s premier Imran Khan for his swearing-in ceremony for second term on May 30. But he will meet Imran Khan in Bishkek on sidelines of SCO summit. Both leaders will attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) meeting in Kyrgyztan’s capital Bishkek mid-June. However, there is no official word from either side.

According to confident sources, officials of India and Pakistan are engaged in fixing the agenda of their meeting. There are possibilities of the meeting between premiers of both neighbouring countries. Talks of a meeting come after Imran Khan called PM Modi on last Sunday to congratulate him on his landslide victory in the Lok Sabha elections. The foreign ministry said that PM Modi thanked Imran Khan for his telephone call and greetings. Pakistan has also downplayed India’s decision not to invite Khan for his swearing-in ceremony.

It is notable that PM Narendra Modi will have bilateral meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Bishkek on June 13-14. It will be PM Modi’s first major international engagement after his re-election in the Lok Sabha polls.

Relations with Pakistan became very tense after a Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist killed over 40 CRPF soldiers in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pulwama on February 14. After this, India conducted air-strikes on a Jaish camp in Pakistan’s Balakot on February 26. The Pakistan Air Force also struck back and captured Indian Air Force pilot Abhinandan Varthaman.