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Sarbjit Dhaliwal
Troubled Reflections: Reporting Violence Media’s
Symbiotic Relationship with Violence, Ethnic
Violence, Terrorism and War
By Gobind Thukral.
Indian Institute of Advanced Studies, Shimla.
Pages 214. Rs 495.
BE it terrorism, war or ethnic conflict, violence
has become a world phenomenon. From AK-47s to bomb
blasts, to mid-air hijackings and human bombs, the
world has seen rapidly changing phases and faces
of terrorism that has become a central issue
across the globe. Also, wars have become more mechanised and deadly with the use of missiles,
laser-guided precision bombings.
Punjab was one of the main hot spots of the world
as it remained neck-deep in firestorms of militant
violence for about two decades, starting from the
1980s to late 1990s. There was hardly any person,
who remained unaffected, one way or other, during
the turbulent period. Several state and non-state
actors were involved in the violence.
The author is a seasoned journalist and the book
focuses on how media reported the violence during
the violent era in Punjab. Through this book, one
can virtually relive that era as it has been
loaded with facts and figures, critical analysis
and personal experiences related to the events,
including the role of politicians, bureaucrats,
police officials and others. It has a far-wider
perspective that goes beyond the focus on Punjab.
Thukral, who watched the Punjab scene from close
quarters, has not shown undue love to the
profession he belongs. He has written the book
with a straight non-sparing approach to call spade
a spade. And he has broken many commonly-held
perceptions such as that media provides oxygen to
terrorism.
"Reporting violence in Punjab was one of the
toughest assignments for any journalists. As green
fields of Punjab turned red with the blood of the
innocent and not so innocent, journalists, at the
receiving end of the morbid state and the
trigger-happy melancholic militants, found truth
hard to come by," writes Thukral. Violence had
deep roots in the politics of the state where some
newspapers had openly played a communal game for a
long time, he asserts.
The first part of the book is about the media
machine and how newspapers are structured and how
they functioned, while the second part is about
the crisis in Punjab.
Ownership patterns, structures and the kind of
commitment to journalism, all count to
characterise and differentiate one newspaper from
another. Radio and television in those days in
Punjab were dishing out a drab propaganda and when
the militants came with guns, these two
institutions wilted.
The media can colour events by reporting these or
by ignoring them. By being selective, if often
misinforms and acts as a propaganda tool. For
instance, Thukral writes that the Anandpur Sahib
Resolution adopted by the Akali Dal was turned
into a highly misunderstood document, courtesy
some mainline newspapers which reported events in
such a manner that entire Sikh community was
painted as violent one.
The purpose of journalism is to explain the
meaning of events as they unfold everyday. While
reporting any violent conflict, terrorism, ethnic
violence or war, the media is bound to suffer from
many infirmities. In any armed conflict situation,
the two sides involved rarely speak truth. Facts
are often twisted to suit their needs. It is
deception, subterfuge and damn lies that become
plentiful in such situations.
When Punjab was aflame, the youth who took to guns
called the Indian security forces and their
opponents tyrants and killers. For the forces and
establishment, these young men were simple
terrorists and enemies of the nation.
In case of war between the two nation-states, the
media becomes a part of war effort. Serious
questions about the desirability or inevitability
of such war or the political games behind such
wars are rarely raised. To question the
genuineness of the armed conflict is considered
anti-national and unpatriotic.
How the media changes perceptions could be,
according to Thukral, illustrated by how a section
of the mainstream media reported the tragic events
in Punjab. Julio Riberio was brought to head the
beleaguered Punjab police in 1986. The journalists
repeatedly asked Riberio about his plans to tackle
the militancy. One newspaper reported that Riberio
wanted to adopt a bullet-for-bullet policy.
Riberio later disclosed that he never made such
statement and words were put into his mouth. He
did not find much of the press honest enough in
reporting the violence in Punjab.
Thukral has given another instance that how the
Akali leader Harchand Singh Longowal’s statement
to hold protest during the Asian Games in 1982 was
distorted by an agency by reporting that Akalis
would gherao the Asian Games. Next day it made
headlines and resulted into the stopping of Sikhs
entering Delhi and even Haryana. The maltreatment
of Sikhs during the Asian Games further alienated
them and added fuel to the ongoing agitation.
There are many examples in the book to recount the
sensational role that the media plays.
"Subjectivity, ideology, predilections and profit
motive in a market economy are so many other
factors that colour what finally appears in the
print. However, it does not mean that all that we
read in the newspaper is highly coloured and no
honest effort to understand the truth and to
report is made. That is also there. It is a mixed
bag indeed".
This book explores all the three aspects of the
issuemedia, militants and security forces and will
be highly useful and an eye-opener for
professional journalists and academicians. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2010/20100124/spectrum/book1.htm
Courtesy http://www.tribuneindia.com/2010/20100124/spectrum/book1.htm
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