Monday, December 01, 2008

Mumbai - some reflections

Mumbai, and the recent terrorist attack it had to withstand - yet again; as I asked a friend whose safety I was anxiously querying, 'how many times I have asked you this same question in the last two years'? - has taken over my thoughts, and much of my conversation, as it must have with every Indian over the last few days. The attack is over - for now - and now we wait for the repercussions, for the inevitable promises on the part of the government in words that mean as little as the actions accompanying them. I doubt that we'll ever know all that transpired, and why - and just how many unfortunate people lost their lives because they happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.

A couple of thoughts are uppermost in my mind - the first concerns the media coverage. We tuned in to NDTV and, predictably, found the news channel concerned with sensationalising the issue - as if it wasn't sensational enough already. Hysterical anchors screamed into their microphones, telling us there's been an attack, here's where it happened, look you can see it right behind me, oh, there's smoke billowing, oh god, I can hear gunshots, and look, here are the NSG commandos; the execrable Barkha Dutt moaned on about how there was a distraught man looking for his sister, how she had received word that there was some foreign woman inside the Taj with her baby, 'with no idea how to get milk for the baby' (as it turned out, there was a baby, but with his father, and miraculously untouched by it all); in the studio, indignant newscasters asked us when it would end, how much more of this are we supposed to take; but in the melee, what was missing was what we had tuned in for - news. Calm reporting of facts, that could tell us what was going on, what we could expect, when we could expect it. We had to turn to the BBC for that.

The BBC gave me the facts I wanted; correspondents in Islamabad told us what was going on at that end and whether it boded well for future India-Pakistan relations; there was incisive analysis and all the while, viewers were kept abreast of events as they unfolded. They interviewed survivors too, but allowed them to tell their stories without butting in with questions about blood and dead bodies, and while NDTV was busy covering every funeral around and exhorting us to invade the privacy of the grieving families and stare at the dead men's wives and children, here's what the BBC did - followed the of a young Muslim man who had been killed, and who was being taken to his village to be buried. There were no intrusive questions, just the picture of yet another grieving family. The only difference - was not someone from the armed forces (and I couldn't be prouder of Karkare's family for refusing Modi's compensation, or Unnikrishnan's father for standing up to the Kerala CM), or someone with Bollywood connections, but an unknown person, and a Muslim. The message couldn't have been clearer. Terrorists, as everyone keeps saying, have no religion. This tragedy has affected people from all religions, from all rungs of the socio-economic hierarchy.

'The media made things worse,' one of friends told me while we were talking about the tragedy. When will the news channels learn that we need facts, not emotionalism or fear-mongering in times of crisis? People watching the news need to know what's going on, and why, and not be told how to feel - not being emotional cretins, we can feel devastated, stunned, worried, and unhappy on our own without being asked to do so by a bunch of so-called journalists yelling into the cameras. And the last thing that people who actually had friends and relatives in the thick of it needed was to be told that there was 'blood everywhere and bodies strewn all over' time and time again.

Here's something that did make me stop and think, though - a ticker on the NDTV channel ran a stream of what seemed like opinions, presumably sent in by viewers. One of them said, 'So far the blasts that have taken place have affected ordinary people. Now that the rich and powerful have been affected, maybe the government will make some stronger policies.' This is a truth that we know all too well - but at times like this, when we're called upon to come together as a nation, it has a greater impact - that we really are a nation where we cannot expect protection, or justice, unless we come from the upper echelons of society. Looking at the NDTV catchline, 'Enough is enough', I couldn't help thinking - have we had enough because this is one attack too many, or is this blast the last straw because it has invaded the sanctum sanctorum, the lives of the rich, the famous, and the powerful? My heart goes out to the people who have lost loved ones, to lives that were snuffed out becaues of motives that I certainly cannot comprehend, and I cannot begin to imagine the terror of those stuck inside the Taj and the Oberoi for three days - and I felt as deeply for those killed in Assam, in Bangalore, in Delhi. But why has there never been a process of identification such as the one that has been taking place with the Times of India journalist ('this one has hit hardest because she was one of us') with victims of the previous blasts? Perhaps because they, for the most part, came from the lower socio-economic rungs and therefore were most emphatically not 'one of us'. Every Indian life is precious - it's sad, then, that the government gets hauled up and the people responsible unceremoniously removed when it's the lives of certain 'important' Indians that have come into the line of fire.

And I do hope there will no retaliatory action taken against Muslim members of Indian society. The last thing we need is more violence, more innocent lives lost, more families shattered.

Postscript - And here's a quote from half-in-half-out-of-the-closet filmmaker Karan Johar, published in today's newspapers: 'We now feel unsafe in our cars with tinted windows and our buildings with multiple watchmen. We now feel what a section of the city's lower-middle class felt on July 11, 2006, when their security was threatened (in the commuter train blasts)'. Clearly, there are two kinds of Othering going on here - one Other is obviously the terrorists, who invariably subscribe to a distorted vision of Islam, and the other Other, much closer home happens to be the 'middle classes' regular, ordinary, unwashed masses, whose insecurity and vulnerability the upper classes have so far exploited in films, novels and art, but have never in the wildest dreams contemplated identifying with. Which, I can't help thinking, has hit them hardest - having the us/them divide breached, or having to contend with terrorist attacks right in their own seemingly secure, luxury backyards?

7 comments:

COMPOS MENTIS said...

i so agree with you. there was hardly any coverage on the first three days of what happened at the CST or the hospital. it is not that people have not died before in such numbers in india from terrorist attacks. it is just that those affected have been unfortunate enough to be middle-class or the lower middle class who have thus remained nameless and faceless to television viewers.
i would also like to make a point here. changing ministers or governments will not change the scenario. what India needs is change in governance and polity. this is 2008 and terrorism is a reality the entire world is grappling with.

Anonymous said...

I've been discussing just this with friends over the last couple of days, Pro. You're spot on with what you've said.

I've seen indignant reactions to the idea that questions about the inequality of Indians could be raised under such circumstances. They seem to suggest that there is a more appropriate time to do so. However, the story of how India's upper middle class and the elite have almost completely ignored what is going on in the rest of the country has been covered well by some people. This article by P. Sainath is an excellent starting point.

http://www.indiatogether.org/2006/apr/psa-depress.htm

There is also serious change in the kind of people we find in media today. Because of the sheer number of print publications, websites, TV Channels and radio stations, there are a lot more people getting into media. And processes that used to screen candidates for objectivity, seem to have been abandoned. Now we have reporting niches that are being filled with woefully misinformed or even blatantly biased people... mostly with their spines absent. They're willing to pander to everybody but the voiceless in India.

This is the reality we have to live with at the moment. Any serious change will happen only if we, the consumers, begin to choose better what we read or watch.

Anonymous said...

There's so much to say here, and I'm really glad you said it in an organized and coherent way. I'm also glad to find you (and the other commenters) feeling the same way. The media coverage was horrendous -- Barkha Dutt going on about the two guys "waving to me" from the Trident just about sums it up, for me! You're right -- we can decide for ourselves if the sights are heart-rending or the situation heart-breaking. We can be shocked and surprised on our own. When we needed the media to give us a rational, objective picture of what was going on, they went off on their own little trip. Just witness the difference in the way the Beeb covers news and the way our guys do. I hate saying this, but how is it they are able to sift the news from the crap heap, while we end up sensationalizing everything? Why is it their newsreaders and correspondents know how to get to the heart of things, but we still have senior journos like Ms Dutt (sorry, I have it in for her!) thrusting her mic at traumatized survivors, saying, "I can't imagine how you feel" (a badly disguised version of the usual "Aapko kaisa lag raha hai!")...

A very cool cat said...

Thanks all of you - I, too, am really glad to see that I'm not the only disgusted with the media - and the fact that India inequality, even in times of crisis has not escaped the attention of some of us.

Compos mentis - I agree, shifting ministers around is hardly the solution. What these attacks highlighted is just how unprepared we are to deal with something on this scale - as I was telling Payal, Western movies and TV shows like 24 seem better prepared to handle such situations than we are here in India!

Vinod - Thanks for the Sainath link - will check it out soonest. And when do we take a good look at ourselves and rectify our internal problems - and that includes issues of inequality - if not in times of crisis?
You're right, too, in bringing up the issue of the proliferation of news channels and publications, and the total abandon with which people are hired - it seems to me that all they look for are people who are ridiculous young - and therefore inexperienced, with no idea how to handle themselves or the demands of particular situations - who are somewhat photogenic. It's almost embarrassing to see 'reporters' yelling and stuttering into cameras, fumbling for words, trying to ram into people's privacy and sensationalise issue in an attempt to cover up their own inadequacies while increasing the TRPs of their channels.

Payal - You're welcome to go on about Ms Dutt - you know the way I feel about her! :D Seriously, though, I think our 'serious' news channels should make it mandatory for everyone to watch a couple of hours of BBC everyday so as to learn the art of good, sensible and objective (thanks for pointing that out - whatever happened to objectivity in reporting? You can't be a journalist these days unless you're biased) reporting.

Unknown said...

Ms. Barkha Dutt - ah. I've had it in for her ever since I saw her, on TV, with a chokehold on a poor journo wounded in an IED blast in Jammu, all in the name of sympathising with him with her tonsils aflame. I heard later that he was gurgling, his eyes wild with not pain but asphyxia, "Chhor do mujhe, chhor do." But would she?

Why's she still around? Her questions on We The People are longer than the answers she's already provided to the people who respond.

NDTV spent a goodly part of last evening on a three-month old girl, "the youngest victim of the terror [sic] attack" who couldn't, obviously, tell them, much to their sorrow, how she felt. The sympathy I felt for NDTV was boundless.

Politicians are, to a man, pricks. Which is not to say that women politicians aren't, but the politicos I've seen go unerringly into the mud after the Mumbai outrage have all been men.

The 'Othering' began just when the attacks tapered off. Do read Sandip Roy's somewhat cat-on-a-hot-tin-roof article in Salon: 'Guns and booming in India' - http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2008/11/29/mumbai/index.html?source=newsletter

Mumbai went through hell. As journalists know, there's always reciprocity. I'm just waiting for some sort of mayhem in Pakistan. As always, innocents will die.

Mukta Dutta said...

Hey Pro here's Barkha Dutt's answer http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/mumbaiterrorstrike/Story.aspx?ID=COLEN20080075194&type=opinion. I read only her introduction. I could'nt bring myself to read that further...

A very cool cat said...

Kajal - ROFL! Yes, if NDTV could get a dose of that 'boundless sympathy' of yours, it would do them a world of good. I saw that piece of sentimental clap-trap - the baby's inability to respond to 'aap ko kaisa lag raha hai' :D - was more than made up for by the mother's tears. All of which they unashamedly lapped up. And why, pray, were cameras and strange people allowed into hospitals wards, into the children's ward? Who they did bribe?

Thanks for the link, though - very interesting. Was amused to see he'd used some of the same words as I had!

A Curved Line - Thanks! I actually read through it all - very predictable, self-righteous, self-congratulatory piece, evading all responsibility whatsoever. 'We were never asked to move'? Seriously? They don't have minds of their own or the intelligence to assess situations? And she calls herself a senior journalist with 'years of experience in reporting conflict'? Excuse me while I go throw up.