The Vice
President of India Shri M. Hamid
Ansari has said that the pursuit of
profit has altered the profile of the media entrepreneur. Today, a media
enterprise is seen as a necessary subsidiary for a growing business enterprise,
a political party and even individuals seeking to leverage public influence for
private gain. Delivering “M.C. Varghese Memorial Lecture” on the theme “Indian
Media in the new Century” here today he has said that on the other hand
deception, opaque flow of political information, or slanted economic data
prevents political and economic actors from exercising rational and well
considered choices. They impede the democratic process and could lead to public
disenchantment.
The Vice President has said that
in a changed and changing world, it would be useful to remember that vibrant
journalism in a democracy is watchdog journalism. It monitors the exercise of
power in the State and stands for the rights and freedoms of citizens. It
informs and empowers citizens rather than entertains and titillates them.
Vibrant journalism is based on professional ethics and should be the rule
rather than the exception it has come to be.
Following is the text of the Vice President Lecture :-
INDIAN MEDIA IN THE NEW CENTURY
“Till yesterday, I was under
the impression that I was simply to inaugurate
the Varghese Memorial Lecture series, My somewhat
illogical mind therefore propelled me to the belief that inauguration would
constitute a formality devoid of any strenuous mental and physical exercise of
articulating ones own perceptions!
The folly of my ways,
mercifully, was detected in time!! All is well that ends well and I therefore
have no hesitation in saying that it gives me great pleasure to inaugurate the
Memorial Lecture series instituted by the Mangalam
Group in the memory of its founder Late Shri M.C.
Varghese.
The life of Shri M.C. Verghese, his rise from
a newspaper boy to the head of the Mangalam Group,
remains an inspiration to every journalist, entrepreneur and social activist. Shri Varghese used journalism as an instrument in his
crusade against social evils, especially the dowry system. His efforts to
promote art, literature and education have left a lasting impression.
The topic for this year’s
Memorial Lecture is timely. The Indian media today is indeed a new phenomenon.
The statistics themselves are staggering. It is estimated that we have:
·
over 400 million TV viewers
·
over 400 million mobile phone users
·
over 300 million newspaper readers
·
over 150 million listening to the radio and
·
around 50 million using the internet.
Media content has thus
rapidly permeated our lives through various formats that are constantly being
upgraded through new technologies.
However, the most important
change in this century is neither these mindboggling
numbers nor the dazzling new technologies. The purpose of journalism and the
objectives of media enterprises have undergone a fundamental change. The
evolution of the process bears recalling.
The pre-Independence period
witnessed the use of newspapers for reform and emancipation and for advocacy in
social and public discourse. The media also became a principal instrument in
the fight against colonial rule and in consolidating our national
consciousness. Political journalism was the staple and provided the sense of
purpose.
In the post-Independence
era, the media was caught between asserting the fundamental right of freedom of
speech guaranteed by the Constitution and the pursuit of the commercial motive.
By the 1990s, our tradition
of a free press had been firmly established. However, the winds of economic
liberalization brought with them the elements of the market economy that have
changed the DNA of our media organisations. Four of
its principal features need to be noted:
First, there has been a rampant growth of broadcasting media,
principally television, along with new delivery modes such as Satellite TV,
Cable TV, Mobile TV, IPTV, etc. The print media too has grown and India is today
estimated to be the world’s second largest print market. The phenomenon of
convergence between news media, entertainment and telecom has meant that the
demarcation between journalism, public relations, advertising and entertainment
is rapidly eroding.
Second, it is now clear that amongst the pillars of democracy, it
is only the Fourth Estate that has an identifiable business and commercial
persona. Today’s media organizations are large business entities with thousands
of employees and huge financial and other assets. Thus their primary professional
duty to their readership has been diluted by the commercial logic of catering
to the interests of the shareholders of the holding companies.
Third, commercial success of media organisations
has become a function of advertising revenues rather than subscription and
circulation figures. The advertisers have thus replaced the recipients of media
products. By the same logic, circulation figures, meant to attract advertising,
became more important than content.
Fourth, the pursuit of profit has altered the profile of the media
entrepreneur. Today, a media enterprise is seen as a necessary subsidiary for a
growing business enterprise, a political party and even individuals seeking to
leverage public influence for private gain. On the other hand deception, opaque
flow of political information, or slanted economic data prevents political and
economic actors from exercising rational and well considered choices. They
impede the democratic process and could lead to public disenchantment.
In this context, the recent
practices of leveraging political and economic content in our media for overt
and covert revenue generation have the malevolent potential to tarnish our
polity and even destabilise the economy. This has led
the Editors Guild and the Press Council to investigate the phenomenon of
electoral malpractices of paid news and coverage packages.
The public purpose of
journalism that guided us in an earlier era thus stands changed. How many of us
remember that Gandhi ji was probably the first editor
in the history of Indian journalism to have started a newspaper for the express
purpose of breaking the law governing the publication of newspapers; or that he
was also one of the first editors to be prosecuted for sedition.
In a changed and changing
world, it would be useful to remember that vibrant journalism in a democracy is
watchdog journalism. It monitors the exercise of power in the State and stands
for the rights and freedoms of citizens. It informs and empowers citizens
rather than entertains and titillates them. Vibrant journalism is based on
professional ethics and should be the rule rather than the exception it has
come to be.
Before I conclude, allow me
to draw attention to three questions on which introspection is necessary:
·
Is there a public debate on issues of concern to the common
citizen?
·
Is sufficient media space given for the concerns of the
marginalized, the dispossessed and the vulnerable?
·
To what extent has our media contributed to upholding the
social and political objectives of the Constitution?
I once again thank Shri Sabu Verghese
for inviting me today and wish the Mangalam group all
success in its endeavours.”
******
SK/RS