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Pune,
8-10 February 2008
On February 8,
around 125 media women gathered at the sprawling
campus of the Yashwantrao Chavan Academy of Development
Administration (YASHADA) in Pune for the sixth
national meet of the Network of Women in Media,
India.
At the
time of the meet, the Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh's visit to the city had caused a sudden
spike in security and road blockades sprang up
overnight. But despite this hiccup, and the constraints
due to the temporary closure of the Pune airport,
as many as 76 media women from across the country
converged in Pune, joining 49 local journalists
and a few students of journalism.
All glitches
seemed minor as participants caught up with old
friends, got introduced to new colleagues, registered
and collected their colourful conference bags,
complete with files and business-card holders
in traditional Maharashtrian woven fabric.
Day
one, February 8, morning
The round of introductions culminated in the
felicitation of two senior journalists from Pune,
Vidya Bal and Sherna Gandhy.
Vidya Bal,
currently editor of Marathi monthly, Milun Saryajani,
was editor of Stree magazine for several years.
She is also well-known for her active participation
in the women's movement, as trustee and founder
member of Nari Samata Manch.
Sherna
Gandhy was with the Eve's Weekly and The Illustrated
Weekly, and was the first woman to become a senior
editor with a men's magazine, Gentleman. She was
also the Resident Editor of The Times of India,
Pune.
Both these
inspirational women addressed the participants,
with encouraging words about the importance of
professionalism in journalism.
Network
news : an eventful year
One of the highlights of the Sixth National
NWMI meet was the opportunity to interact with
media women from across the country, hear reports
about the activities each chapter had conducted,
share ideas and strategies. NWMI chapters in Manipur,
Delhi, Hyderabad, Bengal Network, Mumbai, Hyderabad,
Assam, Pune, Bangalore and Bhopal presented their
reports during sessions on the first and third
days. One invitee from Nepal made a brief presentation
on the situation of women and media in Nepal.
Reporting
the activities of the newly-formed Manipur chapter,
Anjulika Thingnam talked about the growth of the
group. A fund had been set up for two purposes
- for members to be able to do stories that their
management does not allow them to cover and also
to trace the history of women journalists in Manipur.
Two members of the chapter were elected members
of the working journalists union in Manipur as
Vice President and Standing Committee member.
The NWMI-Manipur also supported local NGOs and
women's groups. For example, when sex workers
were beaten up by army commandos, NWMI-Manipur
organised press coverage, targeting sensitive
journalists, meeting them personally and convincing
them to cover the issue. The invitation from the
dynamic Manipur group, as well as the need to
develop closer links between the Northeast and
"mainland" India led to the unanimous
choice of Manipur as the next venue for the NWMI
national meet in 2009.
Sonal Kellogg,
the co-ordinator of the Delhi chapter said that
the year 2007 saw a reasonable amount of activity
in the Delhi group. A few members meet regularly
and the e-group is fairly active. One consistent
activity through the year was conducting workshops
on gender sensitization in journalism schools.
Another step forward was the setting up of a blog
for members to share thoughts and be creative:
www.nwmdelhi.blogspot.com.
Ananya
Chatterjee-Chakravarty, the Bengal Network co-ordinator,
said that the year 2007 was eventful for Bengal,
which witnessed major upheavals - over Singur,
Nandigram, Rizwanur, Taslima - and the subsequent
protests by civil society. A few Bengal Network
members were very active in organizing protests,
fact finding missions, petitions, and civil society
mobilisation.
The Mumbai
chapter co-ordinator Meena Menon talked about
the e.group being an active forum for discussions
in a city where physically meeting was difficult.
Kalpana Sharma added that the strength of the
Mumbai Network is taking up larger issues of the
media. Mumbai and Delhi, she said, are representative
of what is happening with the media - heavy workloads,
corporatisation and contractualisation.
G V Satyavati,
and Gayatri, the co-ordinators of the Hyderabad
chapter, said that in the recent past, there had
been an unprecedented boom in the Hyderabad media
- seven more television channels were on the anvil.
In the last one year, the network chapter had
grown, and the challenge was to get more women
from the English press to participate. She said
that the group would go back with ideas on how
to recruit more members into the chapter fold.
Teresa
Rehman, the co-ordinator of the Assam chapter
which emerged soon after the Bangalore meeting
in 2007, said that the members, from both Assamese
and English media, are in regular touch. Some
events - eg: Adivasi girl stripped and paraded
on the streets. Network was active in the protests.
The Network felt that there needs to be some change
in the attitudes of the police, and therefore
organized a series of meetings - met Commissioners
of police, State Commission for Women, etc.
Sandhya
Taksale, the co-ordinator of the Pune chapter
said that the group has about 40-45 members, of
which about 15-20 meet on a weekly basis. The
group spent the whole year preparing for the national
meeting. Sandhya felt that the high profile national
meet, would help the local network grow in strength.
The Pune group is now getting wider participation,
including from the English press. Besides planning
for the national meet, they also organized visits
to village Panchayats. Another activity was the
survey of women journalists in Marathi press,
which they intend to expand to the whole of Maharashtra.
Due to
the widespread mobilisation across the state for
the meet, chapters from Nasik, Aurangabad and
Nagpur attended. Since many women, especially
from Marathi press are not e.mail savvy, different
strategies were used. Women journalists were contacted
through their own offices/media houses. Also,
letters were sent through the Patrakar Sangh (union),
and through the District Information Officers.
Judging from the high participation from across
Maharashtra, these strategies seemed to have been
successful.
Vasanthi,
the Bangalore chapter co-ordinator said that it
was a low intensity year for Bangalore, after
the annual meeting in February 2007. But there
was frequent interaction on the e-group, in particular
honouring and encouraging peers for professional
achievements like publishing books or getting
awards. One activity through the year, however,
was the Anupama Jayaraman award, arranging the
publicity and collecting entries.
Vidhulata
from Bhopal attended the annual meeting for the
first time. She is trying to get a group together,
and felt that participation in the national meet
would energise and give her ideas. In the run
up to the elections, she felt that it would be
useful for a small group of NWMI members to come
to Bhopal, and make NWMI visible.
The all-women's
team Navodayam from Chitoor, Andhra Pradesh reported
that they continue to bring out their magazine.
In addition, they were educating three girls since
the past few years, and also brought out a report
of crimes against women in Chittoor district.
In the last one year, the group had increased
its circulation from 15,000 to 20,000. They feel
part of the Network, and the annual meet was motivation
enough to rush to bring out the issue of the magazine.
Evidence of their enthusiastic participation in
the NWMI - they want to host a national meeting
in Chittoor at some point!
Bidya Chapagain
from Nepal was the only South Asian journalist
to attend the meet. On behalf of the Working Women
Journalists (WWJ) group, she made a presentation
of the number of women journalists working in
Nepal and their job profile. Very few women journalists
were in decision-making capacities and the beats
they covered included women, children, entertainment.
Men covered politics, business, crime, courts,
parliament, conflict etc, she said. Challenges
faced by women include unfavourable working conditions,
lack of security and infrastructure, low pay and
lack of trust, said Bidya.
The networking
session was followed by an excellent Maharashtrian
lunch.
In the
evening
At the auditorium of the Pune Patrakar Sangh,
the President of the Pune Patrakar Sangh, Dnyaneshwar
Bijle welcomed the media women from all over the
country. He expressed his happiness that the Patrakar
Sangh was able to support this important event,
and hoped that something meaningful would emerge.
The Mayor
of Pune, Rajalaxmi Bhosle, recalled historic figures
of Pune like Jijamata and Anandibai Joshi, the
first woman doctor and educationist Savitri Bai
Phule, and remarked that the city was an apt venue
for the Sixth National Meet of the NWMI. The progressive
atmosphere of Pune, the relative safety for women,
and the respect for professional women made the
choice of the city as a venue all the more relevant,
and also provided the impetus for the Pune Municipal
Corporation to extend its support for the meeting.
The
Anupama Jayaraman award
Azera Parveen Rahman, 23, a journalist from
Assam, currently with the Indo Asian News Service
in Delhi, was presented the second Anupama Jayaraman
award, 2008. A jury of eminent journalists selected
Azera, recognising her writings on the issue of
human rights, women and children. Her award-winning
story, "A
childhood lost to pain" appeared in The
Assam Tribune on April 9, 2007. The article highlights
the plight of children working in zari units where
zardosi embroidery is done.
The Award,
administered jointly by the NWMI and the Jayaraman
family, was set up in the memory of Anupama Jayaraman,
a young and promising Bangalore-based journalist
who passed away in January 2006. Anupama was not
only multi-talented and energetic, but also demonstrated
a keen interest in issues of human rights and
social justice. The Award is meant to encourage
and honour young women journalists who, like her,
believe in meaningful journalism and have the
courage and determination to write on issues relating
to human rights and social justice. The Award
includes a citation and a cheque for Rs. 15,000.
Member
of the jury, senior journalist R. Shankar, the
former resident editor of The New Indian Express,
Bangalore, recalled Anupama's drive, and commented
that Azera's award-winning article "shows
passion for the issue and demonstrates an effort
to go beyond the usual reporting". Receiving
the award from Mayor Rajalakshmi Bhosle, Mallika
Sarabhai and Anupama's parents Nirmala Jayaraman
and Mr. Jayaraman, Azera said that she was proud
to have been recognized for her stories on human
rights, children and gender, but was aware that
her "journey had only just begun".
Commenting
on the small number of entries, Shankar said that
human rights does not seem to be a favoured topic
for young journalists, and therefore recognition
by such awards is all the more necessary.
Keynote
address by Mallika Sarabhai: "Can responsible
media steer the world?"
NWMI Pune chapter coordinator Sandhya Taksale
welcomed chief guest and keynote speaker Mallika
Sarabhai, and mentioned the fact that Mallika,
a dancer and activist, had preferred to attend
the NWMI meet as a media person rather than as
an artiste.
Daksha Warty, Pune NWMI member, introduced Mallika
Sarabhai, one of India's leading choreographers
and dancers, in constant demand as a soloist and
with her dance company, creating and performing
both classical and contemporary works. She also
has an MBA, as well as a PhD in organisational
behaviour and has been the co-director of the
prestigious arts institution, Darpana Academy
of Performing Arts, for nearly 30 years. In 1989
she created the first of her hard-hitting solo
theatrical works, 'Shakti: The Power of Women'.
Since then Mallika has created numerous stage
productions which have raised awareness, highlighted
crucial issues and advocated change. One of her
recent works is the 2006 Unheard Voices, an intensely
physical, musical theatre piece, based on Harsh
Mander's book of the same name. It gives voice
to five of the millions of voiceless Indians through
a series of monologues. In an energy-packed performance,
you meet people who have confronted life on their
own terms but have never accepted fate lying down.
These are stories of struggle and courage. And
of victories.
Daksha also highlighted the fact that Mallika
is a media person in every sense of the term:
besides being the CEO of Tara Gujarati channel,
she was project director for SAT development Television
Program; directed and anchored various chat shows,
logging a total of an astounding 3000 hours on
television. In addition to her media persona,
Mallika Sarabhai is known for her commitment to
women's rights, which was also reflected in her
creative work - 'Sita's Daughters', 'V for Violence',
and other performances. She is also well known
for her firm stands on anti-communal issues.
Addressing the gathering, Mallika Sarabhai outlined
how powerful and influential the media could be.
She used anecdotes from her life as examples to
buttress her point.
In 1963,
her mother, the renowned dancer Mrinalini Sarabhai,
while reading Gujarati newspapers to improve her
grasp on the language, was distressed to read
about young girls in Saurashtra throwing themselves
into wells and committing suicide, in order to
escape dowry harassment. Using the classical dance
form, Bharatnatyam, Mrinalini performed 'Memory
is a ragged fragment to eternity'. Watching this
angst-filled performance in Madras was a member
of parliament who went on to set up a committee
to investigate dowry deaths - the first of its
kind. The central government soon followed suit
and this, Sarabhai said, was the power of a 40-minute
dance drama.
Mallika's
passion for dancing also ensured that she "lived
with Draupadi for five years," when in 1984
she joined Peter Brooke's Mahabharata. She found
women all over the world responding to her interpretation
of 'Shakti' through the character of Draupadi.
As a dancer and an activist, Mallika said that
in her family, confronted with social injustice,
you fought it - that was simply the done thing.
Sarabhai was constantly using her performances
as instruments of social change. Through her play
'Sita's Daughters' she was so convincing, that
she received letters from 40 doctors that they
would henceforth not conduct sex determination
tests.
Taking
her vision to another level, as the CEO of the
television channel Tara Gujarati, she ran a programme
(Kaun kitla paani mein) on how candidates who
were contesting elections for the local elections
in Ahmedabad would solve the water problem. Mallika
said that the questions put to the candidates
were: what they thought were the problems, how
were they going to finance their solutions and
why should people vote for them. For the first
time in 10 years, said Mallika, the BJP lost its
seats in the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation.
"And they blamed me," said a beaming
Mallika. She stressed that instructive programming
need not be dull. In fact, it could spur social
change - for instance, the number of Right to
Information applications increased by 300% - causing
some discomfort to Modi's government. Despite
the success of the channel (Tara Gujarati had
the highest TRPs in the three months that it was
broadcast), or perhaps because of it, it was shut
down.
As the
daughter of Vikram Sarabhai, who bought television
to India in 1968, Mallika said that television
had immense potential and the current programming
was nothing short of disastrous. A few years ago,
Mallika said that her team had offered to make
instructive and entertaining programming content
at very nominal price. The logo for the proposed
series was a take off on Gandhi's monkeys - one
monkey with binoculars, one with a ear piece and
one with a megaphone. Despite a good reception
in pilot programs, the series found no takers,
rued Mallika.
Citing
another example of the power of the media, this
time print media, Mallika referred to her incisive
piece in The Times of India of March 3, 2002,
titled 'J'accuse'. In no uncertain terms, she
labelled the anti-Muslim violence a carnage, and
made people sit up.
Referring
to Ammu Joseph's book on women in journalism,
Mallika said that women journalists needed to
reinvent definitions and not get caught in the
difference between "soft" and "hard"
news, which is based on very male terminology.
And in reinventing the wheel, you discover that
the wheel is actually a chakravuyha. "Who
decides what is good and what is bad? And why
is 'soft' bad? Why is a story about weapons a
hard story, and why is it 'good'? Has it made
anyone happier," she asked. What is needed,
she said, is an inclusive perspective, since 70
per cent of the world has been marginalised. Media
women need to bring humaneness into news. For
example, the Sensex story is not only about the
crores that Ambani made, but the little family
that dared to invest in shares.
During
the discussion session, in response to a question,
Mallika said that if feminism is about equal rights
and if 51 percent of the population is female,
then women's journalism is about feminism. Asked
if her stature as a public personality gave her
a louder voice to be able to use the media effectively,
Mallika conceded that the impact of her TOI piece,
for example, would have been less had a lesser
widely recognized person written it. She agreed
that being famous accorded her a greater say,
but she said that she was disappointed that other
famous persons did not use their names to take
a stand on socially relevant issues. "I use,
in fact, flaunt my name, to highlight issues that
need to be raised," Mallika said.
In response
to a comment that decision-makers in radio and
television feel that we should be "entertainers"
and not "crusaders", Mallika agreed
that the television programming today left much
to be desired, and there was an erroneous idea
that "relevant" needs to be "boring".
This was because there was a paucity of vision
at the decision-making levels of the present television
journalism industry. Mallika said that currently
journalism was all about bowing to management
pressures. She said that journalists needed to
be more creative in getting their stories across
and Internet was a useful medium.
In reply
to a question on how she perceived the latest
Gujarat Assembly elections, Mallika said that
the media had over hyped Narendra Modi's victory.
Out of the 110 seats that the BJP won, in 40 seats,
the margin of victory was by a measly 300 to 1000
votes. This narrowing down of the margin, as compared
with the mandate in 2002 was a silver lining,
which the media had failed to report.
She said
that Modi's chief constituency was the Gujarati
male. "For far too long, Gujarati men have
suffered a sense of inadequacy as the women have
always been on the forefront of all activities.
More and more Gujarati women had resorted to marrying
men from other states," she said. While Gujarat's
men had been content in manning 'papa's businesses',
they had been called 'cowards' in the past for
not taking up 'macho' options like joining the
defence. These men had taken to Modi's macho persona
and constituted a sizable chunk of his support
base. She said that the Gujarat could not be judged
solely on the basis of the economy. Even as the
'development' card had been touted by the BJP,
other indicators like malnutrition, maternal and
infant mortality, crimes against women and minorities
were as abysmal as in the BIMARU states.
After a
sumptuous high tea, NWMI members got an opportunity
to have an informal interaction with Mallika Sarabhai
on a wide range of issues, from women in journalism
and recognising young talent, to the rise of fundamentalism
in Gujarat.
Stimulated
by the discussions, members headed for a lavish
dinner hosted by the Mayor of Pune.
Day
two, February 9, morning : Media, security forces
and democracy
The first session of the day, Media, Security
forces and Democracy was held at the National
Defence Academy (NDA) campus, in Khadakvasla near
Pune. The session followed a brief visit to the
campus, the highlight of which was a visit to
the massive dining hall with a seating capacity
of one thousand. Framed menus dating back to the
1950s adorned the walls, providing a glimpse into
the culinary delights enjoyed by Jawarharlal Nehru,
King Mahendra of Nepal, and the presidents of
various countries. A visit to the war museum was
sobering - flags of Pakistan from the 1971 war,
various armaments and artefacts were grim reminders
of the wars the country has fought.
After a
scrumptious "high tea", participants
filed into the huge auditorium. The session was
chaired by NWMI member Kalpana Sharma. The panellists
were Lt Gen (Retd) Rustam Nanavati, an expert
on counter insurgency, Col Anil Athale, former
head and joint director - War Study, and NWMI
member Teresa Rehman, Guwahati-based Principal
Correspondent of the newsmagazine Tehelka, who
has reported on conflict situations in the North
East.
Deputy
Commandant Major General B S Grewal presented
the welcome address. Beginning with how powerful
the role of the media could be by its portrayal
of the armed forces, he cited the international
examples of CNN during Gulf War I, and the concept
of embedded journalism during the more recent
and ongoing war in Iraq and the Indian example
of the "binding force" of the media
during the Kargil war. Grewal outlined a theme
which the others from the armed forces repeated
in their presentations: that the armed forces
and the media were on the same side.
The moderator,
Kalpana Sharma, in her opening remarks said that
media faces several important challenges when
covering militancy or insurgency and when you
have the State or the Army on one side and non-State
actors such as militants/insurgents on the other.
What should the media do in such a situation?
Can it afford to apply the scepticism that is
the hallmark of good journalism when investigating
any arena of conflict involving two or more parties?
Or does it necessarily have to take sides?
The army
and state agencies involved in such situations
also have to ask themselves how they should deal
with the media, how they respond to civilians
who are aggrieved and whether there is a way to
strike a balance between what are perceived as
"security" needs and human rights.
These issues need discussion as more theatres
of conflict open up in India. Apart from the on-going
problems in Kashmir and India's Northeastern region,
there is the growing arena of internal conflict
as represented by the so-called "red corridor"
extending from Jharkhand to Maharashtra where
the Maoists have established a strong base. In
the past, and probably in the future too, the
Army is often called out to deal with communal
riots as it is seen as non-partisan in situations
where the local law enforcing authority is not
viewed as entirely impartial. Additionally, there
are increasing instances of "terrorist"
attacks, the instigators of which are sometimes
known and quite often unknown, although the State
always has a ready list of suspects.
As a norm,
media tend to represent the point of view of the
State but often fail to report the other side.
This is sometimes due to inaccessibility of the
viewpoint of that other side. But more often than
not, it is because mainstream media automatically
imbues the State's version with greater credibility
than the other side. The question we must ask
is whether this is the right way to handle these
issues?
Another
question that arises is the media's role in investigating
the human rights dimension in any clash within
the context of State and non-State actors. When
the media exposes atrocities by State agents,
they are told that the stories are concocted and
that they have been influenced by the insurgents/militants.
If, on the other hand, the media only represents
the official viewpoint, it is in danger of alienating
the general public that is witness to the violations
that are inevitable in situations of unequal power
and thereby reducing its credibility in their
eyes. So here again, there is need for some debate
and discussion on the stance the media needs to
take. There are probably no hard and fast rules
in this regard. But the absence of debate, and
the propensity of mainstream media to stick to
the known - and therefore the official - version
of all such events necessarily means that some
part of the story is not being told. For the state
agencies, including the army, there are also several
important questions that need to be addressed.
Civilians and the media often question the conduct
of State agencies. Should people in the Army accept
such questioning and recognise that it is legitimate
within the democratic framework or do they feel
that civilians do not understand security compulsions?
Similarly, do they accept that their actions should
be open to scrutiny or do they feel that different
criteria ought to apply to them? And how do they
view human rights, the rights of individuals and
often the most vulnerable, in situations of conflict?
Do they accept that if the media or civilian groups
expose excesses by State agencies, these ought
to be impartially investigated and dealt with,
or do they view all such interventions as motivated?
Lt General
(Retd) Rustam Nanavati, after serving in Sri Lanka,
and various hot spots in India, retired as General
Officer Commanding in Chief, Northern Command,
in Jammu and Kashmir (2001-03). He is a recipient
of the Param Vishist Seva, Uttam Yudh Seva, and
Ati Vishist Seva Medals for distinguished service
in war and peace. Lt Gen Nanavati began his presentation
by saying that while conflict was inherent in
a democracy, the moot point was the manifestation
of this conflict. It can either be done via peaceful
protests or by violent means, which Nanavati said,
was unjustified and unconstitutional because the
use of arms is a threat to law and order and sometimes
to the security of the state. When faced with
subversion, terror, insurgency or a civil war,
the state is obliged to use all legitimate means
to counter it, Nanavati said. The resolution of
internal conflict is the function and the responsibility
of the government, the army can only step in to
do the government's job when the police have failed,
he said.
On counter
insurgency, he said that the media is the primary
means to reach the people and the government should
use it to mould public opinion. Likewise, a "terrorist"
act by itself is also nothing without the publicity.
He said that the media "wittingly or unwittingly"
falls into this trap by reporting on the act of
terrorism, publicizing it and mobilising support
for the insurgents. Nanavati said that while the
media was able to hold the government accountable,
the insurgents were beyond its control.
According
to Nanavati, the way ahead for the army was to
set up its own Public Information Booths, independent
of the Department of Public Relations (DPR). Instead
of psychological propaganda which he said was
irrelevant to counter insurgency, the army should
focus on improving the perception of the public,
which he said could be achieved only by telling
the truth. Nanavati said that it is important
for the army to tell the truth -, but rather controversially
added that while it need not be the whole truth,
whatever was told must be the truth.
Nanavati
agreed that the army tended to use words like
"manage, handle, deal" which imply control
over the media and inadvertently impacted the
feeling of credibility of the media. The army,
he said, lacks the quick response the media expects.
It is overtly sensitive about image and failed
to understand the "media's need for instant
information and its need to repackage the news".
On the
other hand, the media, he said, lacks the knowledge,
resorts to sensationalism, can become prey to
disinformation, and needs to ensure a sense of
proportion and balanced reporting. The media should
also understand the need of the army for confidentiality.
One example he quoted was the need to first inform
the next-of-kin in case of death on duty, before
the family learns of the death on television.
In conclusion, Nanavati said that while the media
should understand and emphasize the cause, it
should not justify violence. He said that the
soldiers were only doing their duty within the
bounds of the law, however harsh or draconian
the law.
Moderator
Kalpana Sharma intervened to say that by and large
the media toed the state line, with a few exceptions.
Teresa
Rehman provided a 'non-state' perspective from
the Northeast of India, which she likened to an
attic - a forgotten part of the house. She highlighted
the fact that there are several phases of the
military and militancy that needed to be understood.
While the economic boom had made it easier for
the insurgents to send press releases via email
and work on laptops and engage with the media,
the media in the Northeast, she said was caught
between the state and the insurgents. Despite
numerous assurances, both the state and the insurgents
interfered in the workings of the media. Several
editors have been kidnapped or killed. Media in
the Northeast has to retain objectivity and can
intensify the democratic process by being transparent,
she said.
The next
speaker was Col Anil Athale, a doctorate from
Poona University, he was on deputation with the
Ministry of Defence where he researched and wrote
the official history of the 1962 Sino Indian war.
He is founder co-ordinator of Pune based think
tank INPAD (Initiative for Peace and Disarmament)
and involved in Track II diplomacy with Pakistan
and China. Col Athale cited incidents in an attempt
to prove that the media never followed up on any
case after the initial reportage. He recollected
the infamous rape case of Nalbari, Assam, in 1979.
At the height of the Assam students' agitation,
army personnel were accused of raping 17 women.
Athale said that the internal enquiry of the army
had revealed that six soldiers and one officer
had halted at the said place, for 20 minutes at
10.30 am in the morning. Athale said that these
were men of the "Dogra" regiment and
were known for being "soft and gentlemanly",
besides which, it was a physical impossibility
for the seven men to rape 17 women in 20 minutes.
Athale said that the media did not correctly report
the incident by not following up on the trial.
He also cited an incident in Kashmir when he witnessed
the army showing restraint and not firing upon
a crowd of 'burqa clad women" despite grave
provocation. This incident went unreported, showing
Athale felt, a distinct bias.
Athale
argued that in many cases the officers in the
armed forces were not transparent with information
with the media to further their own career. The
same motive applied to journalists as they were
more interested in bylines, he said. In this competitive
frenzy, he said that even law and order situations
are branded as "insurgency".
The session
was opened to the floor and in the lively discussion
that ensued, it came to light that the NDA, which
is the training, ground for the armed forces had
no gender sensitivity programme. With obvious
lack of understanding about gender sensitivity
itself, the Deputy Commandant justified the absence
of such training saying that the NDA did not train
women cadets! With such gendered blinkers at higher
levels, little wonder then, that officers in the
Indian Army have little sensitivity to women's
issues.
In response
to a question from T Anjulika, journalist from
Manipur, Nanavati said that Armed Forces Special
Powers Act (AFSPA) was necessary if the army was
to continue with its operations in Manipur. He
said that the Act by itself was all right, it
was the violation of the Act which needs to be
severely punished. Differing with him, Anjulika
said that more than five decades of the AFSPA
has not been able to address insurgency in the
state, and added that Manipur must be declared
as a conflict zone which will then allow human
rights officials to enter and monitor the situation.
During
discussion, Nanavati went back to his earlier
argument that the media needed to guard itself
by not falling prey to the false propaganda of
the insurgents. During his stint in the Northeast,
Nanavati said that he had toyed with the idea
of starting a newspaper to counter the false propaganda
of the insurgents, but the idea had fallen through.
Sonal Kellogg
commented on earlier assertions about the media
and the army being "on the same side"
and said that while the brief of the army was
to fight for the government, the role of the media
was different. She said that the media and the
army need not be, and cannot be on the same side
of the fence.
Meena Menon
refuted Col Athale's suggestion that the armed
forces were the innocent party and always at the
receiving end of media's reportage. She said that
instances like those were the exception rather
than the rule. Menon said that it was the responsibility
of the media to report on what happened to other
Indians because of army excesses, and reiterated
the notion that media could work in the larger
public interest despite not being on the same
side of the fence as the army.
Members
were concerned over the implications of Nanavati's
suggestion that the armed forces need not tell
the entire truth even while telling the truth.
Also, while the army had presented a case against
insurgent violence, it had not fairly portrayed
state violence. The end of the session was followed
by lunch.
Afternoon
sessions : Beyond vice and victimhood : Towards
a balanced media representation of sex workers
The post-lunch session, Beyond Vice and Victimhood:
Towards a Balanced Media Representation of Sex
Workers was moderated by Laxmi Murthy.
Introducing the session, Laxmi Murthy said that
the session had been conceived because issues
around sexuality have always been subject to extremes
of representation in the media - ranging from
silence to sensationalism. Sex work and prostitution
are multifaceted questions made more complex because
of lack of information, differing moral values
and the social stigma attached. While commercial
sex has existed in some form or the other in most
societies, sex workers have lived on the margins
of society through most of human history. Stereotypes,
derogatory names (in all languages), stigma and
general indifference to their humanity prevail
worldwide. The media has often added to the reinforcing
of prejudices and perpetuating myths, and increased
visibility has arguably contributed to a backlash.
In the face of extreme violation of fundamental
rights of sex workers and denial of access to
health, education and other welfare services,
sex workers have evolved several survival strategies
that are often invisible in the "victim hood"
story. It is worth noting that "victim hood"
results not necessarily from being in sex work
(as usually depicted in the media) but that often,
the portrayal is itself the victimisation. Undeniably,
sex work often involves poor health, financial
exploitation and physical and sexual abuse; however,
these abuses are not intrinsic to sex work, but
rather the result of the stigmatization and marginalization
of sex workers in Indian society.
Additionally, the blurring of differences between
prostitution and trafficking does not take into
account the crucial difference between consent
and coercion. Traditional notions of "prostitution
is violence against women" mirror this position
that is being challenged by organized movements
of sex workers. Likewise, the conflation of sex
work (commercial exchange of sexual services)
with human trafficking (coercion into forced labor
of all kinds) harms both the sex workers caught
in the confusion and the fight against trafficking.
Often, short-sighted policies aimed at tackling
trafficking (such as "raid and rescue"
operations led by the police) contribute to the
increased harassment and vulnerability of an already
marginalized section.
Laws (such as the IPTA) related to sex work also
operate within this binary framework of vice and
victim hood, ignoring the complex lived reality
of sex workers. The HIV/AIDS pandemic and regarding
sex workers as "carriers of the virus",
and moves to enforce mandatory testing, has further
narrowed the debate and impacted on the rights
of sex workers.
The session sought to explore the underlying reasons
for an unbalanced portrayal of sex workers in
the media; to identify misrepresentation; to unpack
the myths and prejudices surrounding sex work
and prostitution; understand the proposed amendments
to the ITPA (Immoral Traffic Prevention Act);
provide a realistic understanding of the circumstances
in which women engage in sex work; and promote
alternate terminology and perspectives with which
to understand and report on the lives and issues
of sex workers.
The session
began with the presentation of a media monitoring
exercise initiated by CASAM (Centre for Advocacy
on Stigma and Marginalisation), a project of Sangram
working with sex workers in Maharashtra. The study
was carried out by Vidya Kulkarni (independent
writer-photographer and women's rights activist)
and Dipti Raut (journalist in print and broadcast
media). The aim of the study was to examine media
coverage of sex work to seek clarity on the amount,
extent, quality, and depth of this coverage, in
order to help in better reporting of sex workers'
issues. The study analysed 1107 clippings from
English newspapers and magazines complied by Aalochana,
a Pune-based women's research and documentation
centre. The clippings covered the period from
1990 to 2003 - a period that marks a shift in
discourse on these issues, as a result of the
efforts of groups working with sex workers and
the growing sex workers' movement in India
Presenting
the key findings of the study, Dipti Raut and
Vidya Kulkarni pointed out that the police and
government together form the main source of the
news (44%), followed by NGOs (21%) and Sex workers
(17%). Since the police department remains a major
and influential (29%) source the stories reflect
police angle and action taken by them. Such coverage
in a way reinforces stereotypes of the sex worker
as a wrongdoer, engaged in illegal activities,
said Dipti. Editorials constitute only 1%, showing
scanty attention given to the issue by newspapers.
The small percentage of readers' letters (1%)
shows that the newspaper coverage has not succeeded
in motivating readers to respond their views on
this issue.
The news coverage of trafficking and police raids
is among the highest (29%). However, very few
attempts are made to follow up these operations
and find out the status of rescued girls. Thus,
despite getting larger media space, the issue
of rescue operations has not been followed up
adequately. The study found that journalists have
been lacking in healthy scepticism of the version
of the police. The least covered issue was the
health issues of sex workers (0.38%), while the
most-covered issue was trafficking and the sex
trade (25.59%).
The main
observations of the study were: sex workers cannot
be viewed as a homogenized group; there should
be a distinction made between sex workers and
the sex industry; there should be an attempt to
go beyond the victimization story; there should
be a recognition of the involvement of sex workers
in tackling problems in the industry; the media
should explore more thoroughly legal interventions
and methods like raids and rescue, and their drawbacks,
and encourage debate about issues such as legalization
of prostitution.
Meena Seshu,
Director of Sangram, who has worked with sex workers
in Sangli for more than a decade and a half, took
up some of the issues that surfaced in the survey.
Seshu said that ever since sex work had been institutionalized
with trafficking, it had become difficult to extricate
it from the HIV/ AIDS paradigm. Public health
campaigns believe that sex workers are carriers
of HIV, thus stigmatising them further.
She said
that sex work couldn't be equated with trafficking.
While a lot of trafficking did occur, a section
of women had continued this field "because
this was the best possible option available to
them."
Instead
of using the clichés like the "oldest
profession" or "flesh trade" or
"selling of the body", Seshu suggested
that sex work be looked as a business transaction
of "buying and selling of sex". She
said that violence was not in the act of sex,
but in everything else surrounding this transaction,
which contributed to stigmatisation and marginalisation
of sex workers
The existing
outlook towards sex work was the reason she said
that rescue and raid operations of the police
never worked. The women in the profession have
more at stake, which is why they prefer to join
forces with the brothel owners once the raid is
over. Faced with harassment from the pimp, the
customer, the lover, the police or from the street,
it is the brothel owner who protects the sex worker.
The society on the other hand is keen on "rehabilitating"
the sex worker economically, when she does not
need it. Why would a women who earns in lakhs
each month agree to be rehabilitated with sewing
machines, carpets or candle work, which is what
the existing rehabilitation projects have to offer.
On the other hand, the sex worker continues to
struggle to open a bank account, or get her child
admitted in school, or own a car, owing to the
stigmatisation of the business of sex work.
During
the heated discussion that followed, some participants
said that the "choice" terminology was
erroneous because women, and many child sex workers
are forced into prostitution and have no choice.
The example of bar dancers in Mumbai who were
forced into prostitution was also cited. Seshu
clarified that children should be kept away from
sex work, it was nothing short of child abuse.
The problem, she reiterated, was when adult women's
issues were conflated with the issues of children
who were forced into prostitution. Seshu said
that there was a need to decriminalize sex work.
Until sex work was made safer for those who had
chosen to continue with the profession, it would
be difficult for those who had been forced into
this profession to get out, Seshu argued.
Questions
flagged included: would any of us enter sex work
ourselves, or encourage our daughters to become
sex workers, if not then what "choice"
we are talking about. Seshu said that one is never
asked if she wanted to become construction worker
or a rag picker. But a distinction is made with
the profession of sex work, and this was more
to do with moral judgements. She reiterated that
the "choice" paradigm must be seen in
a larger context of lack of choices in general
for women.
Sonal intervened
to point that in Ahmedabad many women offer sexual
services out of their homes as their men pimp
for them and earn a lifestyle that they would
not be able to afford otherwise. However brothels
are different from home based services. Here the
client is invisible but the women get picked up
during raids.
Seshu said
that if the government intends to formulate a
law then it should sit down with sex workers during
the decision-making process. She said that while
the rights of the sex workers are being discussed,
the right to sex work would be the next fight.
Supriya
Sule, Member of Parliament, who attended the session,
intervened and said that it was important for
law makers to be well-briefed and understand the
issues in a more nuanced manner.
Panel
discussion on media ethics and sting operations
The discussion was chaired by Ammu Joseph.
The panellists included Amrita Shah, contributing
editor of The Indian Express, Kunda P N documentary
film maker and media expert and Prathiba Chandran,
Chief of Bureau of Sahara Samay.
Introducing
the session, Ammu Joseph said that recent debates
in India about ethics in media practice have focused
primarily on "sting operations," especially
on television. "Sting journalism" has
come to be almost synonymous with investigative
journalism even though the sting is only one among
the many available tools of the latter, to be
used only if unavoidable in the course of efforts
to uncover information on important matters of
public interest. Fake stings and stings based
on questionable means of ensnarement have further
muddied the waters.
However,
discussions on media ethics need to go beyond
stings to take in a wider range of issues critical
to the credibility and public interest mandate
of the media. Among these are issues relating
to accuracy, fairness, integrity, transparency,
responsibility, etc. The panel discussion on media
ethics will take into account the public's right
to information, on the one hand, and the individual's
right to privacy, to a fair trial, etc. The blurring
of traditional lines within media houses, separating
corporate/business interests from editorial/professional
practice is another issue likely to generate debate.
Among other related concerns are: protection of
sources, use of unverified information from official/political
sources, use of material obtained by third parties
through illegal means, conflicts of interest,
nationalism/jingoism, communal/caste/gender/ideological
biases, gifts & junkets (and other inducements),
and so on.
The discussion
will also go into the need for and mode of self-regulation
by the industry vs controls by the state and bodies
such as the Press Council, said Ammu.
Amrita
Shah said that the culture of consumerism had
become all-pervasive in the media, which was causing
journalism to lose its edge. Earlier, a certain
degree of restraint was placed on advertisers.
Those barriers are slowly disappearing because
of 'advertorials' and subtle product placements.
This culture was now acceptable as the norm and
was prevalent everywhere, she said.
The format
of 24X7 news had brought with it a new set of
problems, as there were now more segments to be
filled on television. More youngsters are in the
industry now. With no space or time to slowly
build facts and investigate a story, as things
are needed to be produced immediately, the reliance
on 'sting operations' had increased, she said.
Amrita
said that while the state of affairs was depressing,
journalists really did not have a voice vis a
vis the editors and the management. She said that
the citizens, who are on the receiving end of
the news content, should be brought into this
paradigm. Consumer courts can sue channels or
newspapers if they feel that the quality of news
that they have been subjected to is below par.
Kunda P
said that sting operations were powerful tool,
but should be used in a responsible manner. She
also recalled in the "pre-sting operation"
days, when journalists used to do investigative
journalism to uncover facts. An example was the
issue of sex determination tests in the late 1980s,
when journalists posed as decoys and exposed clinics
where such tests were being conducted.
Prathiba
Chandran was vociferously in favour of sting operations.
She said that sting operations per se, were not
problematic. It was the violation of professional
norms during stings that bring it a bad name,
as in the case of the teacher Uma Khurana in Delhi.
She said that a code of ethics should be outlined
and at stake was the credibility of the journalist,
the editor and the organisation. It should be
done in a guarded, controlled manner and tampering
should not be tolerated.
Members
agreed that sting operation was not a new concept.
Even before the advent of television journalism,
the press had been using tape recorders etc to
buttress their stories. Among the issues that
were touched upon were the need to protect those
interviewed in their television admissions for
certain stories, along the lines of a witness
protection systems. Members said that more power
should be vested in the editor as already the
credibility of the media is plummeting. Undue
reliance on Internet-based research and the lack
of verifying information so obtained, was also
discussed.
Amrita
said that while the news content was being brought
out in the name of the "market", the
management made it sound like this consisted entirely
of readers without including the advertisers.
Kunda said
that in certain cases like the Khairlanji rape
and murder case, caste biases also crept into
the media coverage. Meena pointed out that in
the beginning the case was covered by the media
as a 'sex crime' without caste involved.
Certain
issues like junkets, inducements, trial by media,
media being used by political parties were not
discussed for lack of time.
Day
three, February 10, morning
The morning session on health with Dr Sharangapani
was followed by a networking session and frank
exchange of ideas by NWMI members from across
the country.
The session
that followed focussed on the innovative learning
methods by the Centre for Learning Resources.
Setting the context, John Kurrien cited studies
on English language proficiency (or, rather, the
lack thereof) among school students, as well as
the keenness to study English as a window to the
world. Through an interesting audio visual, Zakiya
Kurrien presented their work of using radio to
teach English in government schools in urban and
rural Maharashtra. CLR uses an innovative pedagogy
known as Interactive Radio Instruction, which
is being used for the first time in India. This
allows listeners to not only hear English being
spoken, but gives them the opportunity, during
the radio lesson itself, to speak in English.
The radio lessons contain a variety of child-friendly
formats - drama, songs, language games, etc. in
both Hindi and English - which hold the interest
of children. Along with the focus on teaching
spoken English, radio lessons promote appropriate
attitudes related to democracy, secularism, gender
and health.
The next
session focussed on the work of the MASUM (Mahila
Sarwangeen Utkarsha Mandal), an NGO that is developing
effective means of communication in rural areas
through traditional media such as leaflets and
skits/street plays. MASUM works in the rural areas
of Pune and Ahmednagar districts of Maharashtra
State with the aim of creating awareness about
exploitation faced by the underprivileged groups
in the community and help them organise themselves
with a feminist perspective. Anupama Pathak, Archana
More from MASUM, with village-level activists
Manisha Kunjir, Kalpana Yadav and Anandi Yadav
presented their work of using innovative forms
of communication: flipbooks for health awareness
and skits based on real life experiences.
Vasundhara,
a community radio group from Baramati made a presentation
about how they produce the radio programs for
the local farmers.
The afternoon
and evening of the third day saw members depart,
to get back to busy routines. The sense of camaraderie,
and stimulating discussion charged up the batteries
enough to face the challenges of the profession
with renewed vigour.
The
NWMI national meeting in Pune was made possible
due to the work of Pune NWMI and Pune Partrakar
Sangh, particularly the NWMI Pune co-ordinators
Sandhya Taksale and Manaswini Prabhune, along
with the Organising Committee comprised of Medha
Punde, Nayana Nirgun, Arundhati Ranade, Sushama
Neharkar, Chaitrali Chandorkar, Jayashree Bokil,Daksha
Warty, Prachi Bari, Kaumudi Kashikar-Gurjar and
Ranjani Raghavan.
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