For Indian media, Kashmir is a minor story

The publishers that were analyzed included several English language daily newspapers, online news sites, one television channel and several wire services.
SUSHIL KAMBAMPATI examines Twitter data on four major stories this month

 

We are  three weeks into July and it has been a turbulent month, with several major news events occurring around the world. One news story in India is the continuing civil unrest and armed-forces intervention in Indian administered Kashmir. For the people of Kashmir, this has been a difficult time, with extensive curfew and mobile phone service curtailed. In all this, how much coverage has the Indian mainstream media given to the story, compared to other violent events around the world?

To answer the question using data, I relied on the number of tweets posted on Twitter by a publisher as a proxy for how much coverage the publisher gave to the topic. Each tweet on a topic could either represent a unique new article, or it could be a repetition, or a "replug" or "re-up", of a previously posted article. In either case, the total number of tweets on the topic should give some indication of the importance given to the topic. 

In addition to the Kashmir story, I also looked at three other stories: the July 3rd bombing  at a market in Baghdad, the July 14th truck attack in Nice and the July 15th attempted coup to overthrow the president in Turkey. For this analysis the start of the Kashmir story was taken as July 8th, when the news of the death of Hizbul Mujahideen leader Burhan Wani broke. The data was gathered as of approximately noon on Sunday, July 17th.

The publishers that were analyzed included several English language daily newspapers, online news sites, one television channel and several wire services.

At first glance, looking at the total number of tweets on all these stories, it appears that the Kashmir story was the most important, since it garnered the most number of tweets by nearly all publishers, with the exception of Reuters India. It also tied for top story with the Nice story at Firstpost.

Total tweets story broke

 

Total tweets story broke 1

After the Kashmir story, just over half the publishers gave the Nice story more prominence over Turkey. That was the case for 4 of the 7 dailies and 6 of the 7 online publishers. While the Baghdad story ranks last in the number of tweets, for several publishers tweets were not available going back that far in time. For IndianExpress and IndiaToday, especially, no data is available for the three days after the bombing. That said, looking at those publishers whose tweets are accessible to early July, the Baghdad story still got far less coverage than Nice. In terms of carnage and damage done, the Baghdad bombing caused four times as many deaths and more property damage. Additionally, there were other bombings in the days since.  In this regard, the sensibilities of India's English language news publishers seem closely aligned with those of publishers in the US and Europe.

Since the Kashmir story has been running for over a week, one would expect it to have more cumulative tweets than the others. A more fair comparison would be to look at how many tweets there were right after the story broke. The next chart looks at how many tweets there were during the first three days of the story.

Total tweets

 

Total tweets story broke

Now the picture looks quite different. Almost no publisher tweeted as much about Kashmir as they did about Nice or Turkey. The exceptions are thecaravanindia and Rising_Kashmir. The Baghdad story is still in last place with most publishers, except at TheHindu, scroll_in. thewire_in and ReutersIndia.

The Nice and Turkey stories received a lot of attention from publishers even though they overlapped in time quite closely. The Nice attack occurred less than 24 hours before reports started surfacing of the coup in Turkey.

Finally, the sheer number of tweets doesn't actually convey how important the story was during that period. That comes through when looking at the ratio of tweets on these stories to the total number of tweets during the same time. The next chart shows what percent of a publisher's tweets each story occupied during the initial three days of the story.

 

 Total percent tweets

This shows that the Kashmir story was considered relatively minor during the initial days after it broke. Very few publishers considered it as important as they did the Nice or Turkey stories just after they broke. Aside from Rising_Kashmir and thecaravanindia, some others who rated the Kashmir story highly were CatchNews, HuffPostIndia and the Indian wire services.  To judge by the number of percent of tweets when the stories broke, TheHindu considered the Baghdad story more important.Total percent tweets1

The takeaway is that the media does cover Kashmir, but as the situation continues, the risk is that other global events will eclipse it, similar to the Nice and Turkey stories. For Kashmiris who want their story to be told, the best hope is a quiet summer elsewhere in the world.

 

Sushil Kambampati (@SKisContent) is the publisher of NewsPie.in, India's first micropayment-based news and information platform. He has also taught data journalism at G D Goenka University.

 

 

The Hoot is the only not-for-profit initiative in India which does independent media monitoring.
Subscribe To The Newsletter
The new term for self censorship is voluntary censorship, as proposed by companies like Netflix and Hotstar. ET reports that streaming video service Amazon Prime is opposing a move by its peers to adopt a voluntary censorship code in anticipation of the Indian government coming up with its own rules. Amazon is resisting because it fears that it may alienate paying subscribers.                   

Clearly, the run to the 2019 elections is on. A journalist received a call from someone saying they were from Aajtak channel and were conducting a survey, asking whom she was going to vote for in 2019. On being told that her vote was secret, the caller assumed she wasn't going to vote for 'Modiji'. The caller, a woman, also didn't identify herself. A month or two earlier the same journalist received a call, this time from a man, asking if she was going to vote for the BSP.                 

View More