Sunday, January 31, 2010

Orissa’s Little Camera Strikes Home

AMAR KANWAR

Small and cheap digital cameras first appeared about 20 years ago and it wasn’t long before TV news reporters, cinematographers and documentary filmmakers started using them in a variety of cost saving productions. When footage was compared between the higher end broadcast camera and the little cameras, the image quality of the little cameras were surprisingly good.

But there was something else that happened along the way. The non-professional, the activist and the victim also found these cameras, and began to use them to overturn the politics of the gaze, of the news, and of images of resistance. It forced everyone to acknowledge the existence of another lens and therefore another point of view.

The most recent and striking illustration of this has been in Burma. In the last ten years the Burmese activist in exile shifted from resistance radio and Internet journalism to video and then finally to the extensive use of the small camera inside Burma. In 2007 the world saw graphic images of the Saffron Revolution –hundreds of monks confronting army tanks, armed squads on the streets – followed by the military crackdown. Several of these activists have since been killed or suffered torture and lengthy imprisonment, and we are indebted to them for showing us images of the most remarkable non-violent resistance in recent times. It was a reminder of the meaning of courage and the need for presenting a point of view that had the power to cut through the multi-dimensional image spectacle that governments and companies surround us with.

India and its conscience has also been struck several times by the little camera. It is impossible to forget the images of the 12 disrobed mothers confronting the Indian army at the gates of the Kangla Fort in Imphal, Manipur. It was perhaps the most powerful anti rape protest ever, and was documented on the little camera. The series of short films recently released by Samadrushti Televisions in Bhubaneswar, Orissa stands as yet another striking example.

Initiated by Sudhir Pattnaik, coordinated by film maker Surya Shankar Dash, and filmed mostly by activists, journalists and amateurs, the video series Madhyantara is now traveling from person to person as it reveals images of an Orissa rarely seen. Nolia Sahi, about a fishing village slated for displacement by POSCO and the experience of industrial propaganda; Ashen Life, about the meaning of living with fly ash in Kalinga Nagar; The Human Zoo, about how tribal girls are exhibited as museum pieces in a state sponsored Tribal Mela and The Real Face of Vedanta, with images of devastated rivers and un noticed public hearings; are some of the films that come together in the video series Madhyantar.

These are images with a raw power that are seldom seen. They show us the real impact of the monster that the extractive industries have become. They present before us evidence of a scale of destruction that is hard to believe. In the context of Operation Greenhunt, they also show us images of a strong non violent resistance by villagers who are desperate to protect their lands and rivers. One unforgettable image is the red flickering glow of the fire on the faces of men and women as they burn the documents of a rehabilitation package in a silent collective ceremony of resistance.

Writer's Email: amarkanwar@gmail.com
From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 7, Issue 05, Dated February 06, 2010

Sunday, January 10, 2010

MUFP CONDEMNS HIGH-HANDEDNESS OF BHUBANESWAR POLICE

The Media Unity for Freedom of Press (MUFP) strongly condemns the highhandedness of Bhubaneswar police in dealing with media persons while on professional duty. The latest example of such objectionable practice by the Commissionerate police was denying the city reporters of Odia daily Aaromv access to the venue of the 15th National Youth Conference.

The Odia daily Aaromv has come up with shocking reports about how the police prevented the entry of its reporter and photo-journalist at the Kalinga Stadium on Saturday. The report quotes the IIC, Saheed Nagar police station as saying that he had received instructions from top police bosses not to allow entry to Aaromv reporters and photo journalists! There is another report on how a young lady journalist from the same newspaper had to face humiliations at the hands of a senior police officer.

This is simply unacceptable. We demand a probe by the Chief Secretary, Odisha into the allegations because this is a very serious matter that threatens press freedom. We expect the inquiry report to be submitted within 15 days.

We have never claimed we are special citizens but surely we enjoy certain special rights while pursuing our professional assignments. It’s rather strange that neither the I&PR department nor the Bhubaneswar Police Commissionerate ever bothered to issue proper passes with photo identity to media persons. Nor did they earmark specific areas for coverage by the video journalists and photo journalists. That is one of the major causes behind the chaotic situation that prevailed on the inaugural ceremony of the NYF-15 and this lapse on the part of the organisers and the police need to be part of the Chief Secretary's inquiry.

The police are free to impose reasonable restrictions on access and entry to ensure discipline and smooth flow of schedule in any public function. They also have the right to take to task any media person who violates law. But to single out one newspaper and its reporters for persecution is most condemnable. That the police felt aggrieved by negative reports in Aaromv is understandable but that does not give them the right or the authority to deny the Aaromv team access.


Subhas Chandra Patnaik,
Prasanta Patnaik,
Rabi Das,
D.N. Singh,
Sudhir Patnaik,
Sampad Mohapatra,
Prafulla Das,
Gopal Mohapatra.

Bhubaneswar
January 10, 2010.

Friday, January 8, 2010

World Press Under Attack: Round-Up 2009


Press freedom in 2009


76 journalists killed (60 in 2008)
33 journalists kidnapped
573 journalists arrested
1456 physically assaulted
570 media censored
157 journalists fled their countries
1 blogger died in prison
151 bloggers and cyber-dissidents arrested
61 physically assaulted
60 countries affected by online censorship

Wars and disputed elections: The most dangerous stories for journalists

Two appalling events marked 2009: one was the largest ever massacre of journalists in a single day – a total of 30 killed – by the private militia of a governor in the southern Philippines and the other was an unprecedented wave of arrests and convictions of journalists and bloggers in Iran following President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s disputed reelection.

A total of around 160 journalists in all continents were forced to go into exile to escape prison or death, often in very dangerous circumstances. The Iranian press photographers crossing the Turkish border to escape arrest or the Somali radio journalists fleeing to neighbouring countries to avoid certain death had all reported essential news and information that some people would go to any lengths to suppress.

Wars and elections constituted the chief threat to journalists in 2009. It is becoming more and more risky to cover wars as journalists themselves are being targeted and face the possibility of being murdered or kidnapped. But it can turn out to be just as dangerous to do your job as a reporter at election time and can lead directly to prison or hospital. Violence before and after elections was particularly prevalent in 2009 in countries with poor democratic credentials.

No one should be surprised that, as bloggers and websites continue to flourish, censorship and repression have surged proportionately. There is almost no country nowadays that has entirely escaped this phenomenon. As soon as the Internet or new media (social networking, mobile phones etc) start to play a leading role in the spread of news and information, a serious clampdown follows. Bloggers are now watched as closely as journalists from the traditional media.

Our major concern in 2009 has been the mass exodus of journalists from repressive countries such as Iran and Sri Lanka. The authorities in these countries have understood that by pushing journalists into exile, they can drastically reduce pluralism of ideas and the amount of criticism they attract. “This is a dangerous tendency and it must be very strongly condemned,” Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Jean-François Julliard said as this review of 2009 was released.

Number of journalists killed up by 26 per cent

Almost every journalist killed in 2009 died in their own country. The exception was Franco-Spanish documentary film-maker Christian Poveda, who was murdered in El Salvador. “Less known to international public opinion than the foreign correspondents, it is these local journalists who pay the highest price every year to guarantee our right to be informed about wars, corruption or the destruction of the environment,” Julliard said.

The year began very badly with the Israeli military offensive in the Gaza Strip. As well as refusing to allow foreign media into this territory, the Israeli government carried out military strikes against buildings housing media, in violation of international humanitarian law. Two reporters were killed in these attacks. Journalists and human rights defenders in the Russian Caucasus went through a terrifying year. The witnesses to the dirty war waged by Moscow and its local allies to be “eliminated” with complete impunity included Natalia Estemirova in Chechnya and Malik Akhmedilov in Dagestan.

Radical Islamist groups caused the death of at least 15 journalists worldwide. Nine reporters were killed in Somalia, where the Al-Shabaab militia carried out constant targeted killings and suicide attacks. Four of these journalists worked for Radio Shabelle, which does its best to provide news amidst the surrounding chaos. Reporters in Pakistan have increasingly been targeted by the Taliban in the northwest of the country.

Kidnappings have also continued to rise. Most cases are concentrated in Afghanistan, Mexico and Somalia. New York Times journalist David Rohde and his fixer managed to escape from the Taliban but Afghan reporter Sultan Munadi was killed in the military operation launched to rescue him.

“Three years have passed since the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1738 on the protection of journalists in conflict zones but governments still seem incapable of protecting reporters,” Reporters Without Borders said.

Other forms of violence, physical assaults and threats have gone up by a third (from 929 cases in 2008 to 1,456 in 2009). Journalists are most at risk in the Americas (501 cases), particularly when they expose drug-trafficking or local potentates. Asia comes next with 364 cases of this kind, chiefly in Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Nepal. The number of censored media is escalating alarmingly with nearly 570 cases of newspapers, radio or TV stations banned from putting out news or forced to close. This happened to a satirical magazine in Malaysia, a score of reformist newspapers in Iran, Radio France Internationale in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the BBC World Service in Rwanda.

The number of journalists arrested fell slightly (from 673 in 2008 to 573 in 2009) above all because there were fewer cases in Asia. The largest number of cases was in the Middle East.

Election violence

The 30 journalists killed in the Mindanao Island bloodbath in Philippines had been covering an attempt by a local governor’s opponent to run as a candidate for regional elections in 2010. Tunisian journalist Taoufik Ben Brik was imprisoned in the days following President Ben Ali’s reelection, while his colleague, Slim Boukhdhir, was brutally assaulted. Several journalists were attacked and others received death threats in Gabon following President Ali Bongo’s reelection. Around six media were also temporarily shut down for reporting on the post-election violence and criticising members of the new government. Protests about President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s controversial reelection in Iran prompted a horrifying wave of repression against the media.

Pluralist elections that should be a symbol of democracy and free expression can turn into a nightmare for journalists. State media are too often prevented from giving fair and balanced coverage of all the candidates’ campaigns. Such was the case during the contentious Afghan elections and the travesty of an election in Equatorial Guinea. The most committed journalists can be exposed to reprisals from a rival camp. Media access is not always properly observed, as evidenced in provincial polling in the Tamil areas of Sri Lanka.

The most serious problems arise when results are announced. Overwhelmed by an opposition movement that was relayed online and in the reformist press, Ahmadinejad’s supporters launched an ultra-violent crackdown on hundreds of journalists and bloggers, accusing them of being spies in the pay of foreigners or bent on destabilising the country.

The courage shown by journalists this year before and after elections earned them periods in custody, mistreatment and prison sentences that were in some cases extremely harsh. These post-election crackdowns should stimulate the international community to seek better ways of protecting the press after rigged election results are announced.

“This wave of violence bodes ill for 2010, when crucial elections are scheduled in Côte d’Ivoire, Sri Lanka, Burma, Iraq and the Palestinian Territories” said Reporters Without Borders, which often carries out media monitoring during election campaigns.

More than 100 bloggers and cyber-dissidents imprisoned
For the first time since the Internet’s emergence, Reporters Without Borders is aware of more than 100 bloggers and cyber-dissidents being imprisoned worldwide for posting their opinions online. This figure is indicative above all of the scale of the crackdown being carried out in around ten countries. Several countries have turned online expression into a criminal offence, dashing hopes of a censorship-free Internet.

The Internet has been the driving force for pro-democracy campaigns in Iran, China and elsewhere. It is above all for this reason that authoritarian governments have shown themselves so determined to severely punish Internet users. This is the case with two Azerbaijani bloggers, who were sentenced to two years in prison for making a film mocking the political elite.

Although China continued to be the leading Internet censor in 2009, Iran, Tunisia, Thailand, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam and Uzbekistan have also resorted to frequent blocking of websites and blogs and surveillance of online expression. The Turkmen Internet remains under total state control.

This year, bloggers and ordinary citizens expressing themselves online have been assaulted, threatened or arrested as the popularity of social-networking and interactive websites has soared. Egyptian blogger Kareem Amer is still in jail, while the famous Burmese comedian Zarganar still has 34 years of his prison sentence to serve. The approximately 120 victims of Internet policing also include such leading figures in the defence of online free expression as China’s Hu Jia and Liu Xiaobo and Vietnam’s Nguyen Trung and Dieu Cay.

The financial crisis has joined the list of subjects likely to provoke censorship, particularly online. In South Korea, a blogger was wrongfully detained for commenting on the country’s disastrous economic situation. Around six netizens in Thailand were arrested or harassed just for making a connection between the king’s health and a fall in the Bangkok stock exchange. Censorship was slapped on the media in Dubai when it came for them to report on the country’s debt repayment problems.

Democratic countries have not lagged far behind. Several European countries are working on new steps to control the Internet in the name of the battle against child porn and illegal downloads. Australia has said it will set up a compulsory filtering system that poses a threat to freedom of expression. Turkey’s courts have increased the number of websites, including YouTube, that are blocked for criticising the republic’s founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

“The number of countries affected by online censorship has doubled from one year to the next – a disturbing tendency that shows an increase in control over new media as millions of netizens get active online,” said Lucie Morillon, head of the Internet and Freedoms Desk. “That is why Reporters Without Borders will launch a new campaign against the Enemies of the Internet on 12 March.”

Media on trial

At least 167 journalists are in prison around the world at the end of 2009. One would need to go back to the 1990s to find so many of them in jail. Although the UN special rapporteur on freedom of expression keeps reiterating that imprisonment is a disproportionate punishment for press offences, many governments keep laws that allow them to jail journalists, and continue to abuse these laws. The sentences given to journalists in Cuba, China, Sri Lanka and Iran are as harsh as those imposed for terrorism or violent crime.

Imprisonment and brutality are too often the only way authorities react to journalists. At least one journalist is assaulted or arrested every day in the Middle East. More than 60 journalists were physically attacked or arrested in Iraq in 2009. In the Palestinian Territories, more than 50 journalists were detained by Hamas in the Gaza Strip and by Fatah in the West Bank.

Africa and Asia were neck and neck in the numbers of journalists detained. More than 10 journalists were arrested in 2009 in Niger, Gambia and Somalia, while Eritrea maintained its dubious distinction of jailing the most journalists in Africa, with 32 of them behind bars. In Asia, arrests are thankfully down, but the Chinese and Pakistani security forces continue to arrest foreign or local journalists when they crossed the “red lines” they are supposed to observe.

The 28 June coup in Honduras, which was backed by the conservative press, resulted in the persecution of journalists suspected of sympathizing with the ousted president, Manuel Zelaya, and the suspension or permanent closure of their media. Finally, Cuba drew attention to itself again this year with at least 24 arrests and two new long jail sentences, bringing to 25 the number of journalists in prison.

When the powerful are not arresting journalists, they are harassing them by constantly dragging them before the courts. One editor in Algeria, Omar Belhouchet, was summoned before judges 15 times in 2009. The opposition press in Turkey and Morocco have been bombarded with law suits, which almost always lead to convictions or closures because the courts are more inclined to favour the plaintiff than the media.

Choosing exile to stay Alive
For the first time, the Reporters Without Borders annual roundup includes figures for journalists who have been forced to leave their countries because of threats to their lives or liberty. A total of 157 journalists went into exile in the past year, often in very harsh conditions. Among the countries where the exodus of journalists and bloggers was particularly dramatic were Iran, with more than 50 fleeing, and Sri Lanka, with 29. In Africa, some 50 journalists fled the chaos in Somalia while scores of Eritreans sought refuge abroad for fear of being targeted for reprisals by the continent’s worst dictatorship. Journalists also fled Guinea, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Mexico, Colombia and Ethiopia.

This new measure is an indication of the level of fear that exists within the media in some countries. Journalists encounter many hazards as they go into exile and seek an uncertain future. Some wait months, even years, to get protection and possible resettlement.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Shock and anger continue one year after Lasantha Wickrematunge’s unpunished murder

Reporters Without Borders/Reporters sans frontières
7 January 2010
SRI LANKA
“A year has gone by without any progress in the investigation into his murder,” Lal Wickrematunge said today to Reporters Without Borders, on the eve of the first anniversary of the fatal shooting of his brother, Lasantha Wickrematunge, the Colombo-based Sunday Leader’s well-known managing editor. It is Lal who has replaced him at the helm of investigative weekly, some of whose journalists were recently threatened.

“When finally I am killed, it will be the government that kills me,” Lasantha Wickrematunge wrote in an editorial that was published after his death. Known for his revelations and criticism of the government, he was called a “terrorist journalist” by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, while the president’s brother, defence minister Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, used the courts in a bid to silence him and tried to smear his reputation in foreign press interviews after his death.

“The emotion and anger have not gone away in the year since this famous Sri Lankan journalist’s death,” Reporters Without Borders said. “The anger is being sustained by the government’s flagrant obstruction of the investigation. Lasantha Wickrematunge’s name and memory will not disappear and, in that sense, those who were behind his murder made a mistake.

“Even if these criminals continue to feel sufficiently protected that they can threaten the Sunday Leader’s new editor in messages written in the same red ink, we are confident that one day they will be punished.”

The press freedom organisation added: “We urge the various candidates for the 26 January presidential election to pledge to shed light on this murder and on the other serious press freedom violations that have taken place in recent years and to punish the perpetrators and instigators severely. Some candidates are promising the truth. We hope this is not just words.”

Lal Wickrematunge told Reporters Without Borders: “After a 10-month investigation, the case was transferred to the criminal investigation department but since then they have not taken any serious statements. They called me once, but not again. The examination of the case before the courts has been postponed 24 times. Each time, the police say they don’t have enough evidence. And the only eye witness has been missing for months.”

Lasantha’s widow, Sonali Samarasinghe Wickrematunge, herself a journalist and lawyer who has sought refugee abroad, said in an email to Reporters Without Borders: “One year later, no progress has been made (...) Accusations are being hurled in a desperate attempt to exploit the issue for political gain.”

The murdered journalist’s relatives and friends will meet at his grave in Colombo tomorrow and then participate in series of activities in his memory. Lasantha was attacked by four gunmen on motorcycles as he was driving to work on 8 January 2009. He was taken unconscious to a hospital where he died from his head injuries.

Monday, January 4, 2010

MUFP condemns Nabarangpur Collector’s conduct towards Samaj Reporter Banka Behari Bisoi

Bhubaneswar, Jan. 4: In an emergency meeting, the Media Unity for Freedom of Press (MUFP) condemned the shocking conduct of the Nabarangpur District Collector Ms. Roopa Mishra who not only misbehaved with fellow journalist Sri Banka Behari Bisoi, the Nabarangpur Correspondent of The Samaj but also issued threats to him.

Mr. Bisoi had gone to the Collectorate in his professional capacity as a Reporter to collect information on the district grievance cell. The details of the unsavoury incident which took place in presence of a number of senior district officials and members of the public have been published in The Samaj on 3rd January 2010.

The MUFP demands a RDC-level probe into the reported incident and calls upon the state government to ensure that its officers learn to behave and do not take the media or mediapersons for granted.

The least that the state government should do now is to order an inquiry into the matter and take punitive action against Ms. Mishra for her misconduct. We are all for a healthy relationship with the officials and employees of the state government but that must be based on mutual respect.



The meeting was held near the "Free Press Tree" infront of Soochana Bhavan, Bhuabneswar which was attended by Subhas Chandra Patnaik, Rabi Das, Prasanta Patnaik, Sampad Mohapatra, D.N. Singh, Prafulla Das, Vivekananda Das, Aswini Darji, Satyasunder Barik, Ranjan Kumar Ojha, Bhabani Parija and others.

Odisha journalists join hands for press freedom

Journalists of the Capital city of Bhubaneswar and other parts of Odisha on December, 2009 warned the State government and the police administration not to meddle with press freedom.

A number of senior journalists of the State who addressed a convention titled `Media Unity for Press Freedom' in the city condemned the arrest of Mohana-based journalist of Odia daily `Sambad' Laxman Chaudhury in September this year.

Chaudhury – who was arrested by the Gajapati district police for his alleged links with the Maoists and remained in judicial custody for over two months before he was granted bail by the High Court – was felicitated on the occasion.

The journalists who came together in a rare show of unity also blamed the Puri district police for not taking action against those who badly attacked Correspondent of Odia daily The Samaj Jagannath Bastia a few weeks ago.

Bastia , however, could not attend the convention as he had suffered fractures on one of his legs when he was attacked by some anti-social elements.They also criticised the Jharsuguda district administration for misbehaving with two journalists of Odia daily `Aaromv'.

A series of resolutions were passed at the convention where it was decided that December 14 will be observed as Free Press Day by journalists across Odisha.

The resolutions include a pledge to fight unitedly any attempt to gag or muzzle the press, demand for prior approval in writing of Home department before sections like waging war against the state, sedition and criminal conspiracy are brought against any working journalist, accreditated or otherwise, demand for immediate withdrawal of such charges against Laxman Choudhury as well as arrest of the masterminds behind attack on Jagannath Bastia, and stringent action against officials involved in manhandling of two journalists of Odia daily Aaromv.

The convention thanked senior High Court lawyer Jagannath Patnaik, the Paris based international body Reporters Sans Frontiers (RSF) and all those who stood solidly behind the effort to get Laxman Chaudhury out of jail. A resolution demanding the setting up of a State Media Centre in Bhubaneswar was also passed.

The Convention also decided to respond to any threat or attack against any working journalist in the state.

It was also decided to appeal to editors and management of all publications and channels to ensure their representatives working in rural as well as Maoist-affected areas get proper recognition and identity cards.Journalists from different districts also took part in the convention.


Politicians, social activists and lawyers also participated in the convention and expressed solidarity with the journalists of the state.

Freedom of the Press

Namaskar!

We are a large group of journalists of Odisha who have come together to express solidatiry with Mohana-based Correspondent of Odia daily `Sambad' Laxman Chaudhury. Editors of different newspapers and senior journalists and photo-journalists belonging to all sections of the media are part of the group.

We are planning to organise a meeting to promote freedom of the Press in Odisha soon.

Please contact any of the following five presspersons over the phone to help them organise the proposed meeting on December 14 at Soochana Bhavan (Jayadev Bhavan) in our Capital city of Bhubaneswar sucessfully. Mr. Chaudhury will be invited to attend the meeting.

a) Prasanta Patnaik
b) Sampad Mahapatra
c) Gopal Mahapatra
d) Sudhir Patnaik
e) Prafulla Das

Please wait for the next post to get updates on our future programmes.

Bhubaneswar
December 7, 2009