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Managing Media, Modi Style
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Narendra Modi loves cameras, hates 'newstraders', Pic: Narendra Bisht, Outlook |
NK SINGH
Published originally on 15 August 2015
Everyone wants to manage the media ---- governments,
corporate houses, political players and, of course, the media barons
themselves. Practically everyone with a stake in the power game wants its
fingers on the control button. But it is easier said than done. The Watergate
case bears testimony to the fact that managing media is a difficult task
even for the most powerful people.
The present dispensation in New Delhi seems to have
developed its own strategy of managing the media. It wants to curtail, media’s
access to information. At least that is the message that emerges from last
month’s order by the Home Ministry restricting newsmen’s entry to its offices
in the North Block.
According to website Scroll.in
the ministry has prohibited its officers from passing on any information to the
journalists. Even the Home Secretary is supposed to brief the media only
through Additional Director General of Media, the official spokesperson.
Accredited journalists can interact with officers only in Room 9 of North
Block, effectively banning their entry to other part of the building.
NO ENTRY, NO INFORMATION
This gag order is part of a pattern that has slowly evolved
ever since the BJP came to power in New Delhi. Soon after assuming office last
year, the NDA regime had imposed similar restrictions on the journalists’ entry
to government buildings, including Shastri Bhavan that houses inter alia Press
Information Bureau.
The present government scoffs at the tradition of its Bada Babus
serving scribes with news and gossip over steaming cups of tea, and sometimes pakoras,
in an informal and relaxed atmosphere. As a result, veteran journalists have been
frequently complaining of drying up of news sources within the corridors of
power. Very few officers, they say, want to part with information unpalatable
to the government, and thereby risk evoking the service conduct rules and
Official Secrets Act.
Ever since the exit of the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government,
newsmen covering the PMO have found the successive prime ministers increasingly
non-communicative. Manmohan Singh was known for his deafening silences.
Narendra Modi shares his ‘mann
ki baat’ only through Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin and Instagram. He does
not need “news traders” to communicate with people, thereby doing away with
their monopoly over news.
In any case, he does not have time for them. It is a widely
recognized fact that Modi is accessible to only those journalists who enjoy
proximity on personal as well as ideological grounds. And there is only a
select few in that category.
Remember that one of the first acts of the Modi Government
was to do with the long-standing practice of carrying a planeload of
journalists and government officers to accompany the prime minister on his
foreign trips. The crestfallen editors are yet to recover from the shock of
being cut off from a steady supply of caviar and champagne and those five-minute
visits to the PM’s cabin during the long plane rides.
THROWING CRUMBS AT ‘NEWS TRADERS’
Modi had perfected the art of keeping media at a distance
during his decade-long stint as the chief minister of Gujarat. A man of strong
likes and dislike, he would talk only to those journalists with whom he wants
to talk. As a result, when crumbs are sometimes thrown to “news traders”, they
eagerly lap it up.
In May this year, union Information and Broadcasting
Minister Arun Jaitley threw a party for top journalists at his residence ---- a
day after Arun Shourie slammed the Modi government for delivering less and
focussing more on propaganda. According to a website, indiasamvad, many of the
“news traders” who attended that party vied with one another to please Modi,
who was the star attraction at the get-together. One of the “news traders”
specially flew in from Mumbai for the party.
The BJP feels that a section of the media has been trying to
run down the achievements of its government due to ideological reasons. A day
before the Home Ministry had issued its gag order on journalists, BJP President
Amit Shah had attacked “a desperate opposition” and “a section of the media”
for “spreading misinformation” to malign the government.
It is not only the BJP that blames media for its troubles.
The Congress party’s track-record is no better, as to be only expected. What is
surprising, however, is that the quintessential anarchists in Aam Aadmi Party
are on the same page when it comes to dealing with the media.
Soon after coming to power, it tried to curtail media’s
access to information. It was probably the ultimate irony for a party whose top
leader was a Right to Information activist. One of the very first orders of the
AAP government in Delhi was to ban newsmen’s entry to the state secretariat. Later,
it tried to evoke defamation law against those writing against its chief
minister and other officials. That attempt was nipped in the bud by the Supreme
Court.
So, the big question is, who does not want to manage the
media?
Published 15 August 2015
#journalism #media #media management #NarendraModi #NewsTraders
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