http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?267562

  Society <http://www.outlookindia.com/section.aspx?secid=25> /
Essays<http://www.outlookindia.com/subsection.aspx?subsecid=3>
MAGAZINE
| NOV 01, 2010 <http://www.outlookindia.com/content.aspx?issue=10673>
  *Dissent:* Manipuri women protest the alleged rape of Thangjam Manorama by
paramilitary forces in Imphal, 2004
ESSAY
Mainland Discourse <http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?267562>
The media ignores basic facts about the Northeast, J&K in its insurgency
chatter
 SANJOY 
HAZARIKA<http://www.outlookindia.com/peoplefnl.aspx?pid=4508&author=Sanjoy+Hazarika>

Across India, there is a bonding of searing pain, especially in its northern
and eastern peripheries. The hurt and tumult envelops families and
communities in a shroud of despair, whether it is in the Northeast, Jammu
and Kashmir or earlier in Punjab.

It has its roots in a political definition articulated by regional non-state
groups (armed and civil society) that posits ‘mainland’ India as the
‘other’. The political challenge to the state, backed by armed revolt, has
not been crushed despite deploying the army and paramilitary forces for over
50 years in the Northeast, and in Kashmir for over two decades. It appears
to have been successful in Punjab but at an unacceptable cost. India truly
has been at war with itself—locked with adversaries who have refused to
blink or budge for the most part—but that appears to be changing.



The media misses the point that lack of services exacerbates alienation and
therefore fuels insurgency.


This is different from the groundswell of anger which has spread in central
India as well as parts of Maharashtra, Orissa and Andhra Pradesh. The Maoist
campaign has grown from an acute frustration at the lack of delivery on
promises, from bad government and governance, from the system’s failure to
provide basic health, education and livelihood opportunities 63 years after
independence. The focus here is more on inequity and ineptitude of the state
than on sovereignty. It should be clearly recognised that the politics of
J&K and the Northeast have little or nothing to do with issues of
underdevelopment that drive the Maoist agenda. The country’s media misses
and messes this up time after time because they don’t have a memory of even
contemporary history, forget what happened a century ago.

It could be argued though that poor basic services and slothful, insensitive
and corrupt administration have aggravated the political crisis both in the
Northeast and Kashmir. This is often where the media fails to make the
connection—insurgency and bad governance are part of the same coin, the same
story—and often misses the point that lack of services exacerbates
alienation. These are the kind of stories that must be leadership-driven, by
editors of vision and perspective. For that, you need the kind of determined
editors represented by the ilk of B.G. Verghese and P. Sainath. There aren’t
many of them around.

The challenge in the Northeast—once India’s primary security threat—has
abated in the past decades. On the ground, group after group, tired of
unrelenting security pressure and living on the run, have opted for a
cessation of hostilities or opened negotiations. The earlier power and
romance when they even enjoyed some popular support is truly a thing of the
past. Corruption has seeped into the core of their existence, a condition
rarely reflected by the media. This is not to discount their capacity to
re-emerge because of the Indian state’s ineptness and failure to take
political advantage of favourable conditions. Few in the media reflect on
this at any depth, for want of space, time or interest or all three.


*In the line of fire* Media persons rush for cover during an encounter in
Srinagar, April 2005. ((AFP, From Outlook Magazine Nov 01, 2010 Issue)

On the other side, the men in uniform and government officials wonder why
the media focuses on them and not the ‘anti-national activities’ of those
opposed to the idea of India.

Amid this, the changing nature of conflicts is overlooked. There seems to be
a tacit understanding within groups and civil society that an agreement
assuring great political power within the Indian Union is better than no
agreement i.e. a constitutional settlement, which till recently was
anathema.

But the media, especially television, with its desperation for trp ratings
(which for the most part are fudged anyway), is totally inconsistent and
uncommitted to following up such issues in a sustained manner. Instead, it
gives the impression of being a bull in a china shop with noisy, celebrity
anchors and breathless reporters.

Thus, whenever the media raises the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers
Act (AFSPA), which empowers soldiers to kill on suspicion and still not be
prosecuted for murder, the discourse often focuses on an individual or the
most visible sights of protest in Manipur. These discussions and the
articles should have taken place and been written over the years. Too much
is taken for granted: the metro media has made the mistake of focusing
primarily on AFSPA as in Kashmir, forgetting that the act has been in place
in the Northeast for over 50 years and that for most part of the decades
where other parts of India had awoken “to light and freedom”, people in this
region were being shaken by midnight knocks, destruction of homes, granaries
and villages. Even basic facts are not stressed—for instance, in areas of
maximum unrest in Kashmir, it is not the army that’s been deployed but the
state police backed by central paramilitary forces. Indeed, our focus is
limited; our viagra is the immediate, not the consequences or the
sustainability of the story.



Whenever the media raises the afspa, it only skims the surface and talks of
the most visible sights of protest.


Yet, in the Northeast, the media’s fractured credibility would still be
higher than the government or underground organisations. The reason for this
is simple. Time and again, especially in Manipur and Assam, journalists have
been the target of arbitrary killing and intimidation by armed non-state
groups for their courage in speaking, writing and representing the truth. As
far as the state is concerned, what it seeks to hide is extensive and
devious—whether it is the atrocities committed under AFSPA or other
legislation. Its credibility or otherwise is not helped, for example, when a
group of reporters in Assam band together to write a stunning expose of the
secret killings of relatives of ULFA members during the regime of Prafulla
Mahanta.

That’s why while AFSPA must go, it represents just one challenge. This law
reflects impunity, built into the system and mindsets of those who rule, and
we have been inept at covering both. Unless we understand that, we’ll get
the story wrong and keep talking about street fights when the battles are
elsewhere.
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