POSTED BY Sundeep ON Feb 29, 2012 AT 23:40 IST ,  Edited At: Feb 29, 2012 23:40 IST

Of the many TV shows, documentaries and discussions, the Last Word with Karan Thapar on CNN-IBN stood out, which discussed: Whether Narendra Modi still faces serious questions about his alleged role Is he the best administrator in the country? Or can both coincide?

Excerpts:

Karan Thapar: Does the good administration image wash away his role in 2002 or does it simply reveal that here we have a schizophrenic or Janus-like personality? 

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Feb 29, 2012 AT 23:40 IST, Edited At: Feb 29, 2012 23:40 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Apr 21, 2011 AT 21:23 IST ,  Edited At: Apr 21, 2011 21:23 IST

We got alerted to this thanks to a tweet by India Against Corruption:

In response to NDTV anchor on  whether  Shanti Bhushan and Prashant Bhushan should continue to stay as civil society representatives on the Lokpal drafting committee, given the charges they were facing:

NDTV anchor: “Swami Agnivesh… you will see that the number of people who had to resign from public office—and many people believe this is a good thing—just because of suspicion or allegations or accusations, I mean, from Shashi Tharoor to Ashok Chavan to Sharad Pawar, there are so many different examples where legally, the allegation has not been proven, but even before the trial has begun, these politicians have stepped aside. Now some people are making the argument that those drafting the Lokpal bill must do the same. How do you respond? Do you believe the same standard must be applied as they are applied to politicians?”

Swami Agnivesh: “Well, Barkhaji, let me put it to you this way. Supposing there is an accusation of corruption on some mediaperson who is an anchor of a very famous TV channel, and if that person is initiating debate after debate on corruption and such [a] person is asked, first get yourself cleared of all these allegations and then only you will have a moral right to start or initiate a debate on corruption, should that person step down? What would be your answer?”

NDTV anchor: “My answer would be very simple. My answer would be that we all must answer to the same levels of scrutiny that we subject other people to, and that is exactly what we are debating, whether that should take the shape of answering questions, whether that should take the shape of stepping down, will vary from case to case. And that remains my position. Justice [Santosh] Hegde would you disagree?”

Transcript courtesy sans serif

Also see: an earlier protest against the same anchor

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Apr 21, 2011 AT 21:23 IST, Edited At: Apr 21, 2011 21:23 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 18, 2010 AT 13:35 IST ,  Edited At: Dec 18, 2010 13:35 IST

Sanjay Baru, editor of the Business Standard; Bharat Bhushan, editor of Mail Today; Dipankar Gupta, sociologist and member, News Broadcasters Association discuss the fall-out of the Radia affair and indict the media, pointing out that the zeal shown by media in taking the politicians to task for perceived misdemeanours and wrongdoings is missing when it comes to fellow journalists.

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 18, 2010 AT 13:35 IST, Edited At: Dec 18, 2010 13:35 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Nov 27, 2010 AT 20:15 IST ,  Edited At: Nov 27, 2010 20:15 IST

T.N. Ninan in the Business Standard:

This is not to defend the indiscriminate reproduction of private conversations. Barkha Dutt, for instance, is entirely right to complain that Open magazine did not seek her comments before reprinting her conversations with Ms Radia; Vir Sanghvi would be right to make the same complaint. Others who are in the tapes and who were displayed on the cover of Outlook that featured the 2G scam, had nothing at all to do with the scam; they too have a valid complaint. And since gossip and the airing of loose judgements in casual conversation are indulged in by almost all journalists, those who are not on the tapes should be saying to themselves: There but for the grace of God…

Nor should one overstate the case against Mr Sanghvi and Ms Dutt, since neither is accused of being on the take. What they seem to have done is fall into the trap that beguiles well-known journalists, of thinking that they are important players rather than observers on behalf of their readers/viewers. It is also important to recognise that no one has accused Ms Dutt of tailoring her telecasts to suit Ms Radia, and she declares that she has not. Mr Sanghvi, who is by far the most gifted journalist of his generation, is in a trickier spot because his writing matches what he promised to do in his taped conversations, and you could be forgiven for raising an eyebrow when he argues now that they were his opinions anyway.

Read on at Business Standard

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Nov 27, 2010 AT 20:15 IST, Edited At: Nov 27, 2010 20:15 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Nov 27, 2010 AT 20:11 IST ,  Edited At: Nov 27, 2010 20:11 IST

Barkha Dutt at NDTV.com:

As a journalist, whose work has been consistently hard-hitting and scathingly critical of the ongoing 2G scam and the former Telecom Minister, I am astonished, angered and hurt to see the baseless allegations against me in sections of the media this week.

While there is no doubt that journalists must be held to the same exacting standards of accountability that we seek from others, the allegations in this instance, as they relate to me, are entirely slanderous and not backed by a shred of evidence. The edited conversations between PR Representative Nira Radia and me have been headlined to suggest that I misused my role as a journalist to "lobby" for A. Raja, a man I have never met.

While this is completely untrue, I can understand the anger and anguish that such a misrepresentation can create, among viewers who rely on me to report honestly and impartially. And I would like to address some of the questions raised by these edited transcripts.

The tapes seem to add up to hundreds of hours of conversations between Nira Radia and people from different backgrounds, including scores of well-known journalists and editors from all the major media organisations (TV and Print) in India. Despite this, much of the commentary has been strangely selective in its focus. And quite often, vindictively personal. Consider, for example, that online it is being dubbed "BarkhaGate."

Read more at NDTV

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Nov 27, 2010 AT 20:11 IST, Edited At: Nov 27, 2010 20:11 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Nov 27, 2010 AT 20:00 IST ,  Edited At: Nov 27, 2010 20:00 IST

For those who missed yesterday's Last Word with Karan Thapar where he discussed the sensational Niira Radia tapes involving Barkha Dutt and Vir Sanghvi with N. Ram, Sanjay Baru, Dilip Cherian and Manu Joseph:

N. Ram: I don't think if when you are doing an expose that there is time to get [responses from those named]

***

Karan Thapar: So she tried to contact Azad? So she intended to act as a go-between but failed to get through? Did Barkha tell you that she tried to get through to Azad but could not?
Dilip Cherian: No
Karan Thapar:So who did you check with? With Azad?
Dilip Cherian: I checked...
Karan Thapar: Excuse me, but how did you check? Did you have access to the telephone records? Forgive me if I sound rude... For the purposes of this discussion I will note that you have raised a question of doubt ...

At IBNLIVE

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Nov 27, 2010 AT 20:00 IST, Edited At: Nov 27, 2010 20:00 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Nov 24, 2010 AT 09:14 IST ,  Edited At: Nov 25, 2010 14:16 IST

The Hoot Editorial: Merging estates, Nov 19, 2010

Then some sanctimonious idiot suggests it is not a journalist's job to do all this. Sigh.  Now which planet is he living on?

Sukumar Ranganathan: Editor’s note: Why we are quiet on the Open magazine story, Mint, Nov 19, 2010

The mere submission of a more detailed set of transcripts in the court doesn’t, at least to my mind, make the documents any better as “source” for a newspaper article. They could be authentic, but there’s a chance that they could be forged.

My reporters and editors had no way of finding out, which (and believe me, we tried) I think is the responsibility of an honest newspaper to do. A few weeks back, we decided not to carry a report by a government agency against an industrialist past his prime simply because it was full of holes — far from damning the subject of the investigation, the report made the agencylook foolish. Still, its appearance in a paper like Mint would have itself bestowed it with some credibility

Aditya Sinha: Cleanest PM, dirtiest scam, The New Indian Express, Nov 20, 2010:

Things are going so badly for the Congress that princeling Rahul Gandhi this week in UP announced he was finally getting married. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is rumoured to have considered quitting once the Supreme Court asked why he sat on his hands while A Raja was looting the country. Congress chief Sonia Gandhi is rumoured to be irritated by the varying degrees of incompetence displayed by her government in defending itself in the 2G spectrum allocation scam. Pranab Mukherjee, attending a marriage in Madurai, said the alliance with the DMK was strong despite potential ally Vijayakanth’s open calls to dump Mr Kalaignar; but he said this only after he was told that if Raja is named as prime accused in the 2G chargesheet then Raja would ensure the PM is the second accused. Journalists close to the royal dynasty, including Barkha Dutt and others, have been recorded on telephone with public relations specialist Niira Radia, Dutt seemingly negotiating berths with the DMK after last year’s Lok Sabha elections; the transcripts of these tele-conversations have dealt a huge blow to the Congress’s media machine. Tonight, TV channels will show exit polls from the Bihar assembly elections, and it won’t be good news for the Congress. What a mess. Rahul, you have my blessings.

Yet it is this column’s view, today, that the prime minister should not resign. 

G Sampath: When Radia killed the media star, DNA Blogs, Nov 20, 2010:

It is quite possible that Barkha Dutt and Vir Sanghvi never lobbied for Raja or for anyone else. But it is quite clear from the tapes that they were by no means practising journalism in their conversations with Radia. What they were doing, is acting as liaison officers for political parties and business houses. In fact, if all those conversations were merely in the course of 'journalistic duty', why this strange black-out?

But what is really scary is that, despite living in a 'democracy' that boasts of a 'free press', if you were dependant only on TV and the big newspapers for the biggest news developments of the day, you would never have known about the Niira Radia tapes, and the murky role of mediapersons as political power brokers. Indeed, the main source of information on this scandal has been online media, such as newspostindia.com, various bloggers, and social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, and of course, the websites of Outlook and Open magazines.

Betwa Sharma in the Huffington Post: Indian Media Where Art Thou on Media Scandal, Nov 20, 2010

A shadow has been cast over the Indian media -- the bastion of the nation's democracy. A telecom and political scandal rocking the country has now sucked in top journalists but the media coverage of this new twist is timid -- a simple Google search shows that.

A few bloggers and publications have got the word out but twittering and blogging isn't the staple diet in a country where the majority of its 1.2 billion people are more likely to be reached through mainstream news.

Sagarika Ghose: Is corporate lobbying undermining democracy?, CNN-IBN,  Nov 22, 2010

Discussion with Suhel Seth, Dilip Cherian, Paranjoy Guha Thakurta and Siddharth Varadarajan, the last named later tweeted about the programme:

As I said on IBN, story in May 2009 wasn't DMK-Cong tussle but why Radia, and thus Reliance and Tata, were so interested in DMK portfolios

Twas Suhel who said lobbyists don't decide. I disagreed, said lobbyists exert inordinate influence on policy, polity

V Sudarshan: DMK, shaken, but not stirred, The New Indian Express, Nov 22, 2010:

Now of course the word filtering out of Fort Gopalapuram is that the DMK is shaken, nonplussed. Totally. The Radia tapes — which this newspaper carried at some length and which other newspapers in this part of the world, including a ‘national’ newspaper that A Raja curiously keeps citing in his defence, completely ignored — shed some light on the state of affairs in the first family of Tamil Nadu. They establish beyond a reasonable doubt that there exists, if nothing else, a certain political intimacy between Kanimozhi and Raja, discernible from the way she keeps plugging away for Raja and wants good PR for him with the Kalaignar. It is also clear that her mother’s intercession with her husband may not always have predictable results (“Please don’t tell this to mom, she will mess it up and go tell some rubbish”).  It is clear that Maran and Stalin have some kind of rapport which Raja and Niira tacitly acknowledge (“That he and Stalin tomorrow will be the only ones left to run the party because the old man is senile and he is not going to be around any longer and therefore the Congress will be happy doing business with him because it will be him.. him eventually and he controls Stalin.”)

John MacLithon: India can get rid of corruption through reform, The New Indian Express, Nov 22, 2010:

What is staggering is that so far, even though there are thousands (64,000) of tweets and posts on this scandal on the Internet, the mainstream press and television channels have chosen to sit tight on this story. It is a real conspiracy of silence.

The Deccan Herald Editorial: Anchored in Mire, Nov 22, 2010:

The content and tenor of the conversations go beyond the normal relationship between journalists and their sources and contacts. There was also an indication of tailoring news to suit the interests represented by the lobbyist... If  they become players in the events the credibility of the profession will be lost.

Emily Wax: Indian journalists accused of secretly helping politicians, businesses, The Washington Post, Nov 22, 2010:

Those who defend Dutt and Sanghvi argue that many journalists around the world say things to encourage people to open up about their views and elicit information, building their confidence, even if they don't fulfill their promises.

Many of India's newspapers and TV stations have kept away from the issue, saying the story had too many holes and was vague. Some critics have accused the mainstream media of a seemingly orchestrated blackout.

...Several media experts say that the good news is that the incident will inspire some soul-searching about guidelines for acceptable behavior in the growing Indian media, whose stated goal is to be a pillar of truth in the country's vibrant democracy.

"We are actually happy that these practices have come out in the open," Mitta said. "It forces us to address the problem. We as journalists sit in judgment of others all the time. We should hold ourselves to a higher standard."

Paul Beckett: Oh Vir, What Can the Matter Be?, WSJ, Nov 22, 2010

As I pointed out on Twitter the same day, what the WSJ article misses about Mr Sanghvi's response is this:

VS/WSJ ref 2 his second Aug piece . There was one on June 20 http://bit.ly/cnvdWC that is discussd here http://bit.ly/dxOIMH

Tripti Lahiri: Does the Buck Stop with Barkha Dutt?, WSJ, Nov 22, 2010

Rasheeda Bhagat: Those living in glass houses… , The Hindu Business Line, Nov 23, 2010:

But it is quite clear from the tapes that they were by no means practising journalism in their conversations with Radia. What they were doing is acting as liaison officers for political parties and business-houses. In fact, if all those conversations were merely in the course of ‘journalistic duty', why this strange black-out (from most of the media)?”

Sevanti Ninan: Oh what a lovely blackout, The Hoot, Nov 23, 2010

The great media blackout on the Radia tapes is   finally ending. Maybe editors and others who said that they could not use the tapes or transcripts for lack of authentication are waking up to the the fact that there have been no statements of denial from the principals, except for Barkha Dutt saying the conversation was misrepresented. She does not say it did not take place. Neera Radia has now issued a belligerent statement, but she is not denying the conversations either.

Pratap Bhanu Mehta: Beware the single brush, The Indian Express, Nov 23, 2010:

The fact that all this purported evidence is published in the name of transparency, without context, without any institutional mediation at all, should worry us. We should worry that under the guise of promoting transparency we now promote a prurient interest in private conversations of people, irrespective of whether or not they are relevant to establishing guilt or innocence. Whether particular individuals are guilty or not should be investigated by proper means. But society exhibits a deeper form of corruption and corrosion of principles when all procedures and values are made instrumental to some external mission. What is now being revealed in the name of “anti-corruption” has echoes of totalitarian surveillance: the erasure of privacy, everyone is a snitch on everyone else, and every act other than it seems. The quest for justice becomes a rhetorical cloak for other vices: prurience, settling of private scores, or merely promotion of one’s own virtue.

Admittedly, it is hard to disguise the glee in some quarters that this has happened to the media; what goes around comes around. The philosopher Harry Frankfurt once wrote a great essay on how democracy was subverted more by “bullshit” than by “lies”. A liar at least acknowledges the distinction between a truth and a lie; he just wants to hide the truth. A “bull-shitter” is more dangerous because he does not care for the distinction between a truth and a lie: all subtle distinctions between innuendo and fact, speculation and reality, higher and lower values, relevant and irrelevant facts, are done away with. This is the point where you cannot tell the distinction between a lie and a truth; or rather even truth is simply a weapon for some other extraneous goal. All discourse operates at the same level. The danger is that in our democracy if there are no credible mediating institutions left, this is exactly the position where we end up: discourse without a sense of judgment and discrimination. Whether or not the media will now produce more measured discussions is an open question, but the corruption of discourse is hard to reverse.

Business Standard editorial: A bonfire of vanities, Nov 23, 2010:

In the recent case of telephone conversations involving a PR professional and senior journalists, transcripts of which have been published in the latest issue of two news magazines — Outlook and Open Magazine — the conversations suggest that professional journalists were going beyond the call of duty...

...Equally important would be the role played by professional organisations that enforce codes of conduct on media organisations and professionals. If the media does not correct itself and improve its own ways, it can hardly inspire public confidence when it turns the spotlight on wrongdoing in other walks of life. Moreover, if the media will not reform itself, some other institution — the judiciary, the executive or the legislature — may step in to do so. That would be a sad day for the media and a bad one for Indian democracy.

Santosh Desai: The silence of the hacks, TOI blogs, Nov 23, 2010:

There is a Soviet silence on television these days. Beneath the noise of the 2G scam and the chaotic cacophony of Parliament lurks a deeper silence that haunts every minute of every channel. The decision to blank out the murky goings-on involving some of India's top names in journalism is a staggeringly significant one. To be sure, the silence pervades most of mainstream media but leaps out of television strikingly because of its tendency to pounce on stories of this kind. For television channels, otherwise willing to go to any lengths for the sake of eyeballs to collaborate with each other in this way is quite unprecedented, and therefore particularly revealing.

It is impossible to deny that the issues raised by the recordings are very serious and merit deep introspection and public debate. It is equally important that we refrain from passing sweeping instant judgments on the people involved. It is important to underline the fact that there is no evidence of any improper consideration being offered or accepted as it is to acknowledge that private conversations between any two people are likely to reveal facets of their persona we are unlikely to see in their public postures. If any of our phone conversations were made public, there would be, in most cases, more than enough ground for embarrassment. Also, some of the conversations have nothing to do with any scam; any pleasure we derive out of them is purely voyeuristic.

Sadanand Dhume Dragging India Out of the Muck,  WSJ, Nov 23, 2010:

Much of the outrage is exaggerated. Virtually all journalists sweet-talk their sources; just how much is a matter of degree. Moreover, there's no evidence that any of the journalists in the Radia tapes profited from their conversations, much less had a direct hand in landing Mr. Raja the coveted telecom portfolio that led to the spectrum scam. Indeed, Ms. Dutt and Mr. Sanghvi have been sharply critical of the tainted minister.

Many of those who attack them also forget to point out that the magazines that published the transcripts invaded the privacy of private citizens accused of no crime. The din of the Twitterverse appears to have swallowed an important distinction between the unseemly and the illegal.

And the Indian public seems to want to have it both ways: lauding journalists for their access to power while simultaneously expecting them to keep a dignified distance from power's murk. Simply put, it's naïve to expect a country's political journalism to be entirely insulated from its political culture.

Sevanti Ninan, Vidya Subrahmaniam, Poornima Joshi: Radia Tapes: Media ethics at the crossroads, The Hoot, Nov 23, 2010

The implications of these taped conversations in at least three cases are that the journalists concerned are actively involved in helping a lobbyist who is trying to fix ministerial berths for DMK MPs, among them for A. Raja. For reasons which will help the companies which employ her.

All these journalists are at the top of the profession and were leading teams of journalists at least at the time when these conversations took place. Did they do anything wrong? Should these conversation have been published without giving them a chance to be heard?  Are notions of what constitutes ethical professional behavior changing?

Priscilla Jabaraj: "The spotlight is on the media now", The Hindu, Nov 24, 2010:

Perhaps because of the large number of journalists involved in the controversy, most Indian newspapers and TV channels have not covered the Radia tapes at all, even though they include conversations with Mr. Raja himself and Ratan Tata, head of the Tata group. This despite foreign newspapers like Wall Street Journal and Washington Post taking note of them and none of the protagonists denying the genuineness of the recorded conversations.

Though the blogosphere has been filled with outrage over the seemingly cosy relationship between the media and corporate lobbyists (one website has spoken sarcastically of ‘All India Radia'), questions have also been raised about privacy issues, especially since some of the conversations seem to be personal, with no direct news linkage. “I don't agree that tapes of private individuals not breaking law should be aired,” Ms Dutt said on Twitter.

Outlook editor-in-chief Vinod Mehta defended his publication of the tapes, but declined to comment on the recorded conversations or answer further questions. “We printed the story because it was hugely in the public interest,” he told The Hindu. “Our purpose is not to pass judgment, but to put information in the public domain.”

Postscript: Edited to add some more entries I had missed out on earlier.

Salil Tripathi: Over the thin red line, Mint, Nov 24, 2010:

To state the obvious first: This is not Barkhagate or Sanghvigate—it is Rajagate, or Radiagate.

After you read the transcripts printed in the magazines Open or Outlook and listen to the recordings of the astonishing and entertaining conversations between the formidable lobbyist Niira Radia and some of India’s leading businesspeople, politicians and journalists, it should be clear that the real story is about the collusion of business and politics. Journalists who appear larger than life in their media profile play a small part here—as willing go-betweens, ferrying messages between politicians at Radia’s (and in effect her powerful corporate clients’) request. That isn’t illegal, nor is it necessarily corrupt. But it shows careless judgement and weakens the media’s credibility.

Farzana Varsey: The Media as Middle Man, Counterpunch, Nov 24, 2010:

The sudden interest in the involvement of some Indian media persons in what appears to be lobbying has posed the question about ethics, but it has a lot more to do with the cult of icons. Readers and viewers tend to blindly believe in taglines about ‘truth’ prevailing and ‘we were the first to go there’ with high-profile columnists and anchors; the audience now feels let down and covertly awkward for having propped up these news-bearers.

There is also anger that the exposure was not covered by news channels and only by some print publications. The media is a tightly-knit incestuous lot in India. They know that if they allow one head to fall, theirs will be next on the chopping block.

And finally, the TOI on its website: 2G scam sideshow: Netizens lambast high-profile journalists, The Times of India,  Nov 25, 2010:

According to media observers, while most of the conversations between the lobbyist and journalists are nothing more than just conversations that take place in the course of a day, a few - particularly those around the 2G scam - appear to hint at attempts at power brokering and lobbying.

Says one observer, "On any given day, we all say things - about people in public life, colleagues, possibly even friends and family - that would embarrass us if such conversations were made public. But that doesn't make it incriminating. And you needn't even be a journalist, or anyone of consequence, to say such things. If anything, making such conversations public constitutes invasion of privacy and is unethical.

The fear is that this could divert attention from what's really wrong."

At the same time, he adds, "If the media can defend sting operations and say the public have a right to know, then the public too has a right to know if journalists are indulging in extra-journalistic practices such as fixing deals and meetings - particularly if money has changed hands. It shouldn't misuse the access it enjoys. The media needs to measure up to the same standards it expects of people in public life."

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Nov 24, 2010 AT 09:14 IST, Edited At: Nov 25, 2010 14:16 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Apr 29, 2010 AT 16:24 IST ,  Edited At: May 02, 2010 00:41 IST

There definitely seems to be a bug in the air.

Last week, Outlook reported on how using new technology, the government could - and was - eavesdropping into the conversations of important political leaders without needing legal authorisation

Yesterday, the Pioneer reported that  by "authorised tapping of telephones of several persons, including Nira Radia, who runs several public relations and consultancy companies — like Vaishnavi Corporate Consultants, Noesis Strategic Consulting Services, Vitcom Consulting and Neucom Consulting", the government had "unearthed damning evidence of wheeling-dealing in the spectrum scam" involving telecom minister A. Raja. The finance ministry has since issued a denial.

Today, in the MiD-DaY, quoting perhaps from the same set of documents that had been doing the rounds for months in Delhi, and had been the basis of the Pioneer report, J. Dey reported:

“The documents talk about individuals influencing policy changes at the highest level. It also says that two senior journalists—one a well-known anchor of a national television channel and the other a former editor, columnist and TV personality—lobbied on behalf of industrialists to secure ministerial berths for friendly politicians.”

Meanwhile, late last night The Hindu first put up a 14-page document, which seemed to be the basis of the Pioneer story, which had been doing the rounds earlier, and then took it off  with the following clarification:

A press release on the 2G scam was issued by AIADMK leader Jayalalithaa in Chennai on April 28, 2010. The Hindu is unable to verify the authenticity of a 14-page document purporting to be an official account of intercepted phone conversations and is, therefore, taking it off its website.

The same unverified document downloaded from the Hindu had apparently also been put up on at least one Scribd account [the settings have since been changed to private] with some excitement on Twitter [eg here and here and here]. One of the journalists whose name had been mentioned in the unauthenticated document and who had rubbished the charges last night has since clarified with more details after the report was taken off by the Hindu:

 Whispers in the Corridors

Postscript: April 30: The DNA newspaper summarises the spectrum controversy, seemingly based on the same impugned document that remains unauthenticated and unofficial and had been taken off by the Hindu from its website:

Tata Sons, represented by Neera Radia, have issued a press statement through her agency Neucom Consulting.

“The Tata group has had a long and fruitful association with Vaishnavi Corporate Communications and its chairperson Ms Niira Radia, which has added substantial value to the group’s communications and public perception.

“All of Vaishnavi’s interactions with the government on behalf of the Tata group have been related to seeking a level playing field and equity in areas where vested interests have caused distortions or aberrations in policy.

“Further Vaishnavi’s interactions with the Government on behalf of the Tata group, have, in keeping with Tata values, never involved payouts or seeking undue favors.” 

Read Full Post  |  9 comments
POSTED BY Buzz ON Apr 29, 2010 AT 16:24 IST, Edited At: May 02, 2010 00:41 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Jan 30, 2009 AT 03:40 IST ,  Edited At: Jan 31, 2009 00:06 IST
HTML clipboard

When Rajiv Gandhi's government cravenly gave in to Khushwant Singh's advice and cynically banned Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses, one of the (certainly unintended) consequences -- was that it ensured huge publicity and sale of the book that would otherwise never have been possible. 

Something like that is what a TV channel/anchor -- and presumably, their legal team -- seem to have managed to do by getting a blogger to not only withdraw a blog post [though it is still available in Google cache -- scroll down or just search for ‘Shoddy Journalism’ on your browser] but also issue an unconditional apology.

OK, it's not a great analogy -- there is no fatwa, no death-threat and, hell, no copies to sell either -- and, please, no, I do not think that Salman Rushdie should be thankful to the RG government either -- but you get the picture. 

This is about all I am capable of at this late hour in this sleep-deprived state, after a particularly tiring day.

--

PS: 

1. Looking around, I see there is, understandably, a storm of outrage out there in the blogosphere.  A quick search shows that the bloggers seem to be concentrating on the broad point that the withdrawn blog entry was quoting some excerpts from Wikipedia but, as Prem Panicker poi

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Jan 30, 2009 AT 03:40 IST, Edited At: Jan 31, 2009 00:06 IST
     
 
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