Thursday, September 28, 2006

Coverage of Jain woman's self-inflicted death: Santhara

Wide coverage has been given to the Jain practice of Santhara (or Sallekhana) after the death of Vimla Devi in Jaipur. Never before this practice attracted such attention.

Though magazines and the Tehelka had done features on the practice, the petition filed in the court seeking ban on Santhara and the demise of Vimla Devi, suddenly brought it under sharp focus.

Interestingly, Santhara is a regular feature in Jain dominated areas of Maharashtra, Malwa (Western Madhya Pradesh), Bundelkhand and parts of Gujarat/Karnataka but never such a 'samadhi' invited such media criticism. Only recently a Santhara occurred in Ganj Basoda (Vidisha) and in UP but none of the incidents found a passing mention in electronic media.

Seems the proximity of Jaipur to Delhi is one of the reason for the media's attention. It was long overdue and the issue had to come up before the nation someday. Though Jains may not agree but the truth is that most of those who go for this fasting unto death are older women (often considered useless for the family) and amongst men it is mostly monks who go for this form of death. Ordinary Jain males don't normally end life in this fashion. A 'santhara' raises the 'prestige' of family amongst Jains and also opens avenues of earnings if the family is not financially well-off.

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Tuesday, September 26, 2006

HT's new editor-in-chief in high mode


Though Hindustan Times shed the image of a 'Sarkari Akhbar' long ago, the new editor-in-chief appears to shake it up again to get the lethargy off the staff and bring a lot of changes (mostly internal and not visible to outsiders as yet).

Chaitanya Kalbag, who was earlier Reuter's Asia boss, had taken over as HT's Editor-in-Chief (Vir Sanghvi remains Editorial Director) recently and soon after joining the paper, he has stirred the hornet's nest by scolding the sleepy subs, rapping the reporters and giving earful to the editors all over the country (of various editions).

This is something new to HTians and no wonder many are complaining. What does sound strange to most staffers was his instructions of not availing any junket, no new recruitment and keeping cell phones on 24x7. 'Quote the person or at least give a hint about the source', is the direction to stop the 'planted' stories. Couchpotatoes who hadn't worked for ages appear shocked.

Some say that the changes are visible and mistakes are no longer tolerated. The UK English is back in vogue and sub-editors wary of consulting dictionaries are back to basics, learning the language. Initial days though a few months later we will be in a better position to comment.

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Sunday, September 24, 2006

Sale of majority stake in Agency (UNI) irks journos

The journalists are angry over the 'illegal takeover' of UNI (United News of Indoa), the news agency, that caters to hundreds of newspapers of Indian languages. Protests are being staged in various cities and employees of UNI are most worried.

On Saturday the 'Save UNI March' was taken out in Delhi. The proposed take over of the 45-year-old agency that has a national network of reporters across most of the districts, is being opposed because it is felt that the autonomy of the agency would be hit by the private takeover. CPI(M) has taken up the matter with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The agency has been facing financial crisis for a long time.

Click for the website of UNI.

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