Insensitive scoops and devasted families
A newspaper scoop on the unsolved case of a dead journalist raises serious questions about harming the reputations of those who have survived her, particularly her child.
The
more one scrutinizes crime reporting, the more evident it becomes that some
guidelines are needed on the way crime, and the lives of the victims and the
accused is covered. Does the reputation of a dead person need no protection at
all? Is a police official’s statement, even a speculative one enough basis for
allegations to be freely made? And if not, is not such reporting libelous?
A
new book is just out in the market, titled "Branded." Its sub title is Police,
Press and People. It is the labour of love of a woman who seven years ago
suffered on account of callous coverage of her son’s death. As she writes in
her dedication, her son died two deaths—one physical, and the other the loss of
his name. The book covers crimes such as murder, rape, and suicide that are
given wider coverage by the media and more prone to sensationalism. It looks at
crime reporting, the rights issue, and the mindset and bias of both press and
police. The issues this book raises are important, because between the police
who investigate and the reporters who cover crimes, a lot of unintended damage
is done in the first few days of reporting, or even later.
You
can end up libeling the dead. And insensitive reporting can be enormously
damaging to the family of the victim. Take the Hindustan Times scoop on July 29
in the case of Shivani Bhatnagar, the Indian Express reporter who was murdered
two and a half years ago. For all these days the case has remained unsolved,
but now we are told the police have finally been able to crack the mystery. The
paper therefore ran a banner headline atop page one on a Sunday---"Shivani case
cracked, arrests soon". That is enormously high visibility for the story, the
reporter’s byline and unfortunately for the victim of the story. For it had a
unintended victim, as I will explain shortly.
The
reporter says the murder was ordered by a senior government officer with whom
she developed a close relationship. It goes on to allege that she was killed
because she was pregnant and had been putting pressure on the official to marry
her saying the child was his. "According to sources" when she continued to put
pressure on him to divorce his wife and marry her, he became desperate and
ordered the murder.
The
story does not mention that Shivani Bhatnagar was married, which she was.
Nobody can know for sure (other than Shivani and her husband) whose child the
baby was. But the paternity of the child has now been questioned in the most
public way possible. The child survived his mother’s murder, but heedless
reporting puts him in danger of being stigmatized though nobody knows for sure
whose child it is. Did the child have to be dragged into the story? A story on
a case where charges have not been framed, the matter has not reached the
courts, and nothing about the paternity or anything else has been proven. You
need DNA tests to establish such links, can a report make the connections so
airily on the basis of a briefing by sources? And why was the police official
doing a briefing that would provide a scoop that would cause distress to the
family of the dead, without any findings being officially declared?.
Three
days after this report the Indian Express reported that the officer working on
the case had been transferred. And the Delhi Police Commissioner was quoted as
saying that the case had not been cracked, despite impressions being created to
the contrary.
The irony is that the reporter whose story this is (the story carries a slug in bold type saying HT Exclusive) also writes in the collection of articles in "Branded." She writes on sources on information, and ends with the following para, "In fact to guard against ‘plants’ is perhaps the