Logwritten
SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 2008 5:26 PM IST
The foreign correspondent Edward Behr had titled one of his books Anyone Here Been Raped and Speaks English? It pithily shows journalistic callousness, where reporters hardened by tragedy cannot respond in a humane way to a crisis. But it is one thing to be moved, quite another to be moved by the idea of being moved. And honest reporters try to avoid falling into that trap by reporting facts, letting them speak for themselves.
A journalist is supposed to be good at observing facts, reporting them accurately and objectively, and telling stories. A journalist is not a post-trauma counsellor, therapist, medical assistant, or someone who can compensate victims financially or represent them legally.
Accepting this circumscribed role requires humility: Journalists are neither qualified nor elected to play roles requiring different skills. And yet, in a scathing indictment, distinguished journalist P. Sainath has criticized his colleagues for their lack of outrage and compassion over India’s rural crisis, and for paying attention to frivolous stories, such as fashion shows.
In a recent address before the Editors’ Guild of India, the Magsaysay Award-winning journalist said the media is charmed by frivolity because of a fundamental disconnect between mass media and mass reality. The poor, he argued, are structurally shut out from the media. Corporate agendas dictate the media, and the institution has become more elitist than the other estates of democracy—the legislature, the executive and the judiciary.
To be sure, the Indian media is not infallible. But if newspapers fail to serve readers, the market will fix the problem, and more serious alternatives will emerge (as indeed they have).
By juxtaposing a fashion event with the Vidarbha farmers’ suicides, Sainath is pitting the so-called India against Bharat, or “shining” India ­versus “declining” India. Far from solving any problem, it accentuates an unnecessary divide.
The tragedy of farmers’ deaths cannot be denied. But on a scale of outrage and compassion, is it the most important story of the day? What about the victims of the Bhopal gas disaster, or the oustees of the dams on the Narmada river? Or the Sikh survivors of post-Indira Gandhi assassination massacres in 1984? Or the victims of the Gujarat pogrom, a group I feel compassion for, after the failure of Narendra Modi’s administration to protect civilians? Who, if not the Indian media, kept those stories alive?
In any case, how sound was Sainath’s analysis of rural India and the solutions he offered? Was the narrative, in each case, one of debt-ridden farmers, driven by hunger and poverty, taking their lives? But then, in The Times of India, earlier in April, Mohammed Wajihuddin wrote of alleged murders passed off as suicides to get compensation from the state, making real the morbid fears of perverse incentives the government’s compensation package created. Economists had already pointed out potential moral hazard by loan waivers; few had predicted that the word “moral” would be in its original, and not economic, sense.
Sainath also lamented that eight million people have given up farming in the past decade, and many are looking for urban jobs “that are not there”. Really? As the informal sector of unorganized workers is far larger—and undocumented—on what basis can one conclude that there are no jobs for migrant labour in towns and cities? And what’s wrong with a few million farmers giving up farming? Many economists have shown that Indian farm productivity is low because the land-holdings are too small, making efficient farming unviable. There are too many Indians trying to work as farmers and many would prefer to do something else. The land is not productive; agriculture’s share of India’s wealth is declining, and the sector is not growing rapidly. A transition to services or industry is a good thing.
Finally, Sainath returned to his perennial theme, rural hunger. He said that per capita availability of certain foodgrains had declined, implying that farmers committing suicide was a tragic consequence. He said, “The availability of foodgrain has fallen from 510g a day in 1991 to 422g in 2005—a fall of 88g for one billion people for 365 days a year! That means your average family is consuming 100kg less of foodgrain than it consumed a decade ago. Where is your outrage?”
My outrage is over questionable statistics. As economist Surjit Bhalla showed in response to an earlier Sainath assertion, food consumption per capita has risen. As Indians have prospered, they are eating different types of food—not coarse cereals, but fish, meat, eggs and milk. In a 2007 study in the Economic and Political Weekly, Praduman Kumar, Mruthyunjaya and Madan M. Dey concluded that food consumption in India was moving towards higher-value commodities.
Maybe those reforms are working. Anyone here with an open mind and reads English?
Salil Tripathi is a London-based writer. Your comments are welcome at views@livemint.com
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Amrita Said:


I found it interesting to hear what Mr Tripathi had to say in his piece of today titled Media and Moral Outrage. I'd also had the opportunity to attend the Editor's Guild lecture by Mr P Sainath. Some thoughts which arose on reading what was said in the piece, based on my limited awareness of the subject. I'm familiar with quite a few of the pieces written by the distinguished journalist as Mr Tripathi put it, primarily published in the Hindu where Mr Sainath is the Rural Editor. I think it is a powerful pen which seeks to bring about change of the kind that Mr Sainath is seeking. He is definitely and obviously not content to merely report facts alone. Facts which are usually based on thorough research both on the ground in the rural areas (where he spends a major part of the year) and other sources. He goes beyond the role of a journalist as defined by Mr Tripathi of reporting facts only, by seeking to influence public opinion and those involved in governance via his lectures and his writing based on facts. He forces us to think beyond the conventional even if he does not find you always in agreement. He very often makes us uncomfortable with some of the positions we hold. His single mindedness of focus and bluntness discomfits most folk. I'm not quite sure what Mr Tripathi was trying to say when he questioned the significance of the rural story vis a vis the Bhopal tragedy et al. There is no competition between such issues and there should be sustained coverage on all such critical issues so that public attention is held through time. Drawing attention to the media coverage of fashion week to give one stark instance vis a vis the coverage of the agrarian crises during the Editor's Guild lecture was an eye opener for most of us outside the media. I agree that there may not be much to be gained by dwelling on what divides rural from shining India, but we need to be aware of what is happenning or not happenning in our backyard. At some point it will have a bearing on our lives whether we like it or not. Media coverage of lavish weddings is a case in point in contrast to instances of farmers committing suicides due to being unable to pay back loans of comparatively very minute amounts. As to whether the odd case of murder is termed as suicide in Vidarbha, as reported by Mr Tripathi there is enough evidence of real farmer distress leading to suicides and documented by journalists like Mr Sainath and others, including the Government. It is important to note these are losses of human lives impacting families and societies in innumerable ways. I'm not sure whether Mr Tripathi is aware that the suicides have continued even as the PM visited and subsequently announced a package for the region. Recent media reports have referred to a new CAG report questioning the impact of the PM's package in Vidarbha. I'd suggest all this be put in before the pipe is lit. I would love to say more but I hope your piece triggers the responses across India, an alert and awakened India. Sincerely, Amrita Narayan Achanta

Posted On 5/1/2008 8:57:26 PM
nivedita Said:


I don't think there is much to add now that Amrita has beautifully given her views. Mr Tripathi, what you have told is very true. Reporters are to report the facts and let facts portray reality as it is. Going by this definition, P Sainath is a reporter par excellence. I don't think he has ever tried to provide prescriptions to all that ails in rurals. If he is unhappy that most of his folks are busy with glamour reporting, does it increase the urban-rural divide? What does Tripathi mean when he says media has kept various issues (be it Bhopal gas tragedy, or Gujarat riots, or Sikh riot victims)alive? Does it mean we should have ranking as to which is the No 1 issue to be reported on p1? Discussion on one should mean discussions on the rest should not be taken up. He is perhaps bored that Sainath took up his pet topic of rural hunger. We are bored too, Mr Tripathi. The World Food Program had warned of such a scenario atleast a decade back. No the media didn't 'play it up'. Media takes up an issue only if it is in the breaking news category. By now, this paper, both the print as well as the online version have put up hundreds of stories on the rise of foodgrain prices and riots in Haiti. If there are counterarguments to Norman Borlaug's thesis that without the use of chemical fertilizers, governments will be unable to cope up with the rising demand for food and biofuel. Now does it mean that the media stops publishing Keith Bradsher's articles and Borlaug's sweeping assumptions. Another perpetual theme, Mr Tripathi, that maximum no. of kids in India and South Asia, under the age of 3 are malnourished. Now, should the media report it? Its been there for decades now. Again, Mr Tripathi, one can always argue with the analysis given. But reporters like Samanth have again brought to the forefront an issue we conveniently ignore.

Posted On 5/2/2008 2:24:00 PM
nivedita Said:


contd: Many economists and reporters have argued that small landholding is not the primary reason for the agricultural distress. The ground reality is very different, the suicides in Vidharbha are in stark contrast to the ones in Kuttanad(Kerala). In the latter, the local CPI-M cadres refused to bring in labour from TN or provide the machine, and the paddy fields could not be harvested! Agreed, these issues are really boring, and people like Sainath hit our conscience when fashion shows or pages after pages of IPL, ICL and the like, are easy to digest. Again, issue of climate change, another perennial theme, hundreds of articles, viewpoints and arguments, give us a break! Arsenic poisoning, a very old problem, a very old analysis, again made it as the page 1 Mint special story. Mr Dipankar Chakraborti's work is decades old. Should we go over it again? You will realise Mr Tripathi, issues are not about mere statistics or errors creeping into them, the issue is of indifference on the part of government to provide any answers. Reforms are indeed working, so says the 'Bird of Gold' report published by McKinsey exactly a year ago, but how and where and at what cost? And who is to look into these questions? Sometime back Vir Sanghvi asked this question 'who are our heroes' and also 'where have they gone'. They are here, Mr Tripathi, Sainath, Keith Bradsher, Somini Sengupta(who brought out a brilliant 3-part series on another dull topic like flood), and other reporters are heroes. If your managing editor does not give space to these heroes, toiling everyday to get to the truth, it is then that we will have the real divide, between the two Indias. They may never get a Bharat Ratna, but let us credit them and their work. Sincerely, nivedita

Posted On 5/2/2008 3:21:24 PM
Priya Said:


Hello Mr Tripati,came across your article in a blog. " What's wrong if a million farmers move away from farming?"- This sir seems to be written by someone who has no clue about the ground reality. Mr.P.Sainath substantiates each and every argument of his and he doesnt merely give out numbers. His arguments and articles are based on ground reality and are factual. And what is wrong with his comparing two events? Is it not true that the indian media today of which even i am a part of gives more coverage to IPL and lakme fashion shows den farmers dying? Mr Tripati i would like to know ur definition of an average indian. In a country which has one of the highest rates of malnutritioned children i would like to know how is it that u and other economists claim that the food consumption has gone up? Your article is shocking and i hope more people read ur article and respond to it. And PS: maybe taking a look at NSS data and other 'credible' data would help widen your perspective.

Posted On 5/8/2008 12:55:21 AM
kishor Said:


VIDARBHA FARMER SUICIDE said... role of media is covering agrarian crisis is too serious to discuss.even after more than 5000 farm suicide ,p.sainath is the only one senior media person who has visited like local reporter moved more than 500 farm suicide effected villages and was only one person who forced indian prime minister to have visit ncf chairman dr.ms swaminathan vist in sept,2005 then visit of expert and all study panel of planning commission in dec.,2005 march 2006 then indian prime minister dr.man mohan singh has visited vidarbha as per reports of p sainath and first relief package rs.3750 crore was announced but failed to serve purpose then repeated visits and write ups of p sainath forced indian govt. to announce rs. 60,000 crore loan waover on 29th feb.,2008 and on next day 1st march p.sainath visited suicide effected villages along with indian minister manishanker ayer to and till follow up to stop agrarian crisis is going.p.sainath's role act as main opposition party in agrarian crisis,he has been advocating dying indian farming community has been well acknowledged smt.sonia gandhi,PMO,indian parliament,all political parties in india ,all section of international and national universities,forums,foundations,bodies,masses and press. anger of p.sainath is justified as even after international media reporters were visiting india to take know ground reality of vidarbha ,not single senior editor has asked his junior staff to visit vidarbha. I am witness to 33000 farm suicides of vidarbha since 1998 and happened to see role media very closely and it is painful part of my life but very shameful bolt to Indian media chapter due to it's proven hostile role as first they failed to report fact then they reported fabricated reports with out visiting vidarbha.in fact indian media community failed to report agrarian crisis or food crisis or poverty crisis as you cant write the issue by sitting in the delhi-mumbai-madras office hence version of p.sainath on visits to vidarbha since june 2005 by senior editor is very important hence mad rush to get free pass lakme fashion week is point to be raised in editors guild meet.p.sainath has respect to all media community and it's not matter of divide in bharat and india ,there is already big gao between india - bharat but to look at it one has to visit vidarbha not fashion week. kishore tiwari vidarbha jan andolan samiti kishortiwari@gmail.com contact-094222108846

Posted On 5/10/2008 12:39:19 AM
Neha Said:


Let's not draw lines within the media, highlighting one aspect, while hiding another. It's a free set-up, and which is why most people love and hate it with equal vigour. Imagine a day when newspapers highlight all misgivings in society, while consciously not delivering anything that's worth its readership, by which, I mean the usual fashion, movies news. Why are the media critics always dragging the farmer into debates when talking about the darker side of journalism, I don't understand! To my mind, equating a journalist who writes on fashion, to be equated with someone who writes on Vidarbha, is a sad comparison. If a journalist wants to write on fashion, society, what is wrong with going over the top sometimes on it? There is enough readership to be created, and I am one such person who reads just about everything that's printed! Am I then not a part of "that" national consciousness which holds its regard for the agrarion sector or the hardships involved there? Who is anyone to judge me on it? Why should we create benchmarks for the sake of living in a false sense of nationhood? Someone who doesn't watch IPL, or reads reports on Bollywood, is not a purist in my eyes, neither will I disregard someone who only follows movies or fashion like a religion. Let's get real for once.

Posted On 5/12/2008 3:21:42 PM
biprorshee Said:


I'm not a big fan of Sainath myself. He came across as too loud too often to me but hey, this is a personal opinion! However, I shall also at this point say that not all criticism of a man you're not too fond of comes across as a pleasant reading. I have problems with Mr. Tripathi's views. A couple so glaring that I lost my interest reading the whole of his piece. It is preposterous to firstly compare the two issues that he has, specifically speaking, fashion pageants and Vidarbha. Thereafter actually referring a fashion event as an example of "Shining" India and farmers' suicides as "Declining" India. Personally, Mr. Tripathi, I'd call this journalistic callousness more than anything else. Do not mistake me to be a part of the moral brigade who'd cry foul at the mention of fashion shows and the likes. In reality, they bore me and I wouldn't really think they signify "Shining" India to me. Bringing up issues like the Bhopal Gas Tragedy, the Sikh massacre, the Gujarat riots and putting it up against Vidarbha is outright naive, if nothing else. I do not think there are any more people dying in Bhopal, or any more Sikhs being burnt alive, or Hindus and Muslims chopping each other in Godhra. But famers are still dying in Vidarbha! Asking if that is the most important story of the day; I would like to believe that maybe not the most but a rather important one. What's coming of the debt waiver by the Finance Ministed? How is it impacting the farmers? I'd like to think the issue is far from being trivial. I wouldn't have dared become a journalist if like Tripathi I too thought that a scribe is just a machine to puke facts; maybe being a financial reporter keeps me from sharing the "Shining" perspective of Salil Tripathi but I think I'm better off this way....

Posted On 5/12/2008 6:33:25 PM
Vasanth Said:


The US President said: ”Just as an interesting thought for you, there are 350 million people in India who are classified as middle class. That’s bigger than America. Their middle class is larger than our entire population. When you start getting wealth, you start demanding better nutrition and better food, and so demand is high, and that causes the price to go up.” This was his explanation to the rising inflation! He accused Indians of eating more!!!!! Food consumption has indeed increased with rising population, but the cause of inflation is not consumption but it about food production and agricultural production, being the a magnanimous sector is not left out by the corporate giants like CARGIL and Montsana. Being a signatory of GATT and WTO we must abide by what BIG BRO ( US) dictates. This is evident by the fact that India importing wheat a few years ago!! " Everything boils down to economics"!!!!! And regarding this pro and anti P.Sainath article, All i have to say is the media is yet another sector in the swelling globalized Pro-urban indian economy!!! The media gives what sells! Fashion week sells while farmer death is not a good capitalizing theme, it does not attract corporate sponsors like lakme or any other MNC product! Well True journalism is reporting facts as it is, but in contemporary " Thomas Freidman times", journalism is an inseparably blended with western imperialism and Rupert Mudroch being its God! We are mere consumers of media dope, We pay for it, Get high and get indoctrinated! " The world is not flat!!!" " To know something, You need to be it" therefore a journalist must transform himself/herself to what he wants to know or write! Well, Saying is one thing, writing is another thing, Living for a cause and doing is a greater thing!! i hope my dear country men live their lives for a cause, noble, humane and a cause worth living for! The above words are thoughts of a great man Sitaram, who is our dear MAHA DODO!!! Live life, DO

Posted On 5/14/2008 3:50:05 PM
Neeti Said:


I am a little stunned to learn that you see no problem with a few million farmers giving up agriculture!! We are not talking about a few farmers but a few MILLION. No matter how much the services or industrial sectors expand, they still do not produce food for human consumption. Would you agree that the world is headed for a food crisis? As of now, agricultural land is being sold mostly for industrial purposes, building of malls and office complexes etc. And that should be seen as problematic. Because we are not just losing farmers, but also farmland! Economists have argued both in favour and against size of farmlands being the main cause for low Agricultural productivity in India. But even if the productivity is low because the farms are small, something should be done at a policy level to attempt consolidation of farmland and increase productivity. We cannot and should not stop development, but there has to be a basic balance for Sustainable Development.

Posted On 5/18/2008 5:22:19 AM
Salil Said:


Biprorshee, Mr Sainath compared journalists who write about fashion shows with journalists who cover the deaths of farmers. I did not make the comparison. My point was to show that it was not a fair comparison, since many serious journalists are covering other equally - if not more - important stories, like Bhopal, Trilokpuri, post-Godhra violence, etc. Thanks; Salil

Posted On 5/19/2008 12:45:26 AM
Re: Biprorshee Said:


I stand corrected in all humility! Impulsiveness knows no bounds. Much apologies extended, Mr Tripathi!

Posted On 5/26/2008 2:57:19 PM
Jamie Said:


10-15 years later, this discussion/arguments will continue on internet forums, blogs, and even TV shows.... but they will not change.. they will still be reporting entertainment, cricket, fashion, etc and not core issues which the author here mentioned.... they just refuse to change..in the name of TRP's. The media big wigs do not think its their responsibility to improve their standards of reporting. Its sad.. but its a fact. There is so much to be done in our country, so much to report.. but they care a damn... all they r worried abt is TRP's.

Posted On 6/26/2008 6:48:05 PM
shyamal Said:


The commenters have to realize that average farm worker gets an annual wage that is one fifth of an industrial or service worker. It is absolutely necessary that number of farm workers get reduced from 300 million to 10 million over the next two decades. The government must educate them, help them move to urban areas. The people including Sainath, who are sympathetic toward rural poverty would themselves never even dream of moving to a village. It is absolutely necessary to help rural people become urban ASAP.

Posted On 8/23/2008 1:21:05 AM