Reprinted From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 40, Dated
JOURNALISTS IN India and elsewhere have masqueraded as defence equipment agents and political party researchers (TEHELKA), representatives of a small manufacturers' association (Cobrapost), a student (India Live), beggars (The West Australian), and as police (Arab News). The issue is one of using deception to get information. Not that different in theory from the practice increasingly adopted by investigators and policemen the world over of posing as journalists to gain access to those eluding the law. Why, then, are we jolted when we find others impersonating us to achieve a professional goal?
What happened in
Asked to help, local journalists led the impersonators (who posed as journalists from
When both media and police seek access to Maoists with completely different objectives, this incident boggles the mind. The police could argue that Mahato is a wanted man and their impersonation served a public purpose. Should we buy that? Can they gain access to underground extremists by posing as doctors? Any ethical reservations there?
Exactly a Sunday earlier, full-page advertisements telling us that Naxalites were murderers appeared in newspapers everywhere. P Chidambaram's ministry has evidently decided to use the media to fight Naxalism. Advertising campaigns and stories giving the government version are pretty much what the term 'using media' has meant so far. But with this development, we have a new definition.
Policemen and investigators impersonating journalists are becoming fairly common, internationally. Earlier this year, it was confirmed that the French military officials who were abducted from their hotel in
Why is a detective or cop posing as a reporter worse than a reporter posting as a small businessman or a political party worker? Because information gathering is at the core of what the media does and people need to believe that journalists are doing an objective job, not providing cover for some other purpose. What will a reporter seeking access to a Naxal, a militant, or an underground person have to do hereafter to prove that they are a bona fide reporter, not a state official in disguise?
Can cops arrest underground extremists by posing as doctors? Any ethical reservations there?
If this becomes acceptable strategy for either state or non state actors, it strikes at the trust the hunted everywhere repose in the press. The
The press corps needs to protest. The operation will give other security forces elsewhere in the country ideas unless they are immediately forbidden by the government from using this ploy. But something tells me that this government will see this practice as the lesser evil.
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