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DISPATCH BASHARATPEER

turned-legislators flying in private jets to gatherings of the Indian parliament, Indian girls being crowned Miss World or Miss Universe, about the Indian stake in the call-center industry, or the burgeoning ranks of Indian software professionals in America and elsewhere. But for a handful of exceptionssuch as Tehelka, the crusading Web site that became a print magazine in 2004, the biweekly Frontline magazine, and an English-language daily. The Indian Expressthere are no outlets that attempt to map, contextualize, and explain these billionaire public servants and peripatetic techiesand through them the journey India is making. I have experienced this frustration firsthand. After the December 2001 attack on the Indian parliament by a Pakistani militant group that operates in the disputed region of Kashmir, India and Pakistan almost went to war. Three men from Kashmir, including a Delhi University lecturer, were arrested and charged under a controversial law, the Prevention of Terrorism Act, which allows a suspect to be detained up to 180 days without being charged; the burden of proof is on the accused, the identity of witnesses is withheld, and confessions made to police officers without a lawyer present are admissible as evidence. Most leading newspapers and magazines described the lecturer as the "mastermind" of the attack. I covered the trial for a news portal called Rediff. com. Except for the day the three men were sentenced to death, only a few other reportersnone from TVjoined me in the courtroom. The attack was described as the Indian 9/11, and most newsrooms, in the grip of a strong nationalist sentiment, chose to ignore the trials of the accused. I wanted to write about the trial in some detail, but Rediff.com is basically a daily news site that doesn't publish longer, explanatory articles. Through some London-based journalist friends, I got in touch with the editors at the Guardian's Weekend magazine; they liked the idea and published a detailed piece titled, "Victims of December 13," in July 2003. A few months later, in October 2003, a higher court acquitted two of the three accused in the attack, including the university lecturer.

Style Over Substance


Despite India's media boom, its journalism is shrinking
BEFORE MOVING TO NEW YORK IN AUGUST 2 0 0 6 , 1 MET WITH FELLOW JOURNALISTS

and writers in New Delhi. The conversations always veered to an irritatingly familiar topic: Where is the space in Indian journalism for serious, detailed reportage? It is ahizarre conversation in light of the tremendous expansion of media in India. The economic liberalization in the early 1990s produced scores of nonstop television news operations and a number of new newspapers and magazines. Marie Claire now has an India edition; Time Out Mumbai and Time Out Delhi, even Scientific American India are all new additions to the country's newsstands. In 2005, Random House launched its India operation. Foreign Affairs, Time, and The Economist have all recently published cover stories on the "rise of India." The opinion pages of leading Indian newspapers talk about the twenty-first century being the Indian century, about imminent superpower status. But as in the U.S. and elsewhere, an expanding media market is no guarantee that it will be filled with the best journalism. Young television anchors and reporters breaking news to millions of Indian viewers in their faux American accents try hard to ape Fox News and CNN. Pamela Anderson's silicone implants, Paris Hilton's escapades, and sexiest-people lists are mainstays in the daily fashion and entertainment supplements of the leading English-language newspapers. Last year in a town near Delhi, a child fell into a well and soldiers from a nearby army base came to rescue him. TV news broadcast the drama live for two days, hyping what their marketing folks tagged the "Prince of Life." The story was on the front page of most newspapers. Meanwhile, there is another side of the "rise of India." It is a darker side, brimming with complicated stories that demand detailed reporting and spacein print or on airto be told properly. In the rural areas of India, for example, thousands of cotton farmers have committed suicide after falling hopelessly into debt. It is a continuing tragedy, which has yet to find its James Agee and Walker Evans. With the exception of the detailed reporting on the subject by Palagummi Sainath, the rural affairs editor of The Hindu, a Madras-based English-language daily, the story has been largely ignored. The effects of the industrial expansion on traditional, tribal-dominated rural areas are invisible in magazines and newspapers; they are mostly not interested in such grim subjects. The unwillingness to allocate resources and time for deeply reported, longform writing is visible even in the Indian press's coverage of the new economy, business, and the fast-growing Indian fashion and movie industries. There are news reports on the rising number of billionaires in India, about businessmen24 MAY/JUNE 2007

The typical cover story in an Indian he mentioned a story he wrote in Ocnews magazine does not exceed 2,000 tober for the Times Magazine, "China's words. When President Bush visited New Leftists," about the debate in China India in March 2006, op-ed and edito- over economic growth and its costs. "The rial writers celebrated the U.S.'s accep- debate in China has much relevance for tance of India's nuclear energy program. us in India," he said via e-mail. "I wish Stories of the "Indo-U.S. Nuclear Deal" there was a forum in India where I could dominated the print and broadcast me- publish an article like that." dia. But no one was writing, for example, I came to New York on a journalabout the unusually high rates of can- ism fellowship, and suddenly had accer and birth defects among the people cess to various journals and magazines working in and living near India's big- that published long-form writing. I was gest uranium mine at Jadugoda in the impressed, for instance, by the space northern state of Bihar. I told my editor devoted to the coverage of torture by I wanted to write about this. But Tehelka, American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanwhere I was working by then, had a small istan, and the Bush administration's staff and meager resources and could not policies on torture. Yet the American spare a reporter for such a story. I never media were severely criticized for their went to Jadugoda. Nobody went there. failure to dig into this story earlier. The About two months later, I left the maga- criticism was justified by American zine and resumed freelancing for some standards, but I had my own reasons British and American magazines. It is no coincidence that foreign journalists produce much of the best journalism about the difficult issues facing Maybe it isn't India. A few years back, Matthew Power, relevant to talk a contributing editor for Harper's, wrote the best piece linking the indiscriminate about suicide and use of pesticides by plantation owners radiation sickness in the southern Indian state of Kerala when India is to a rise in the rates of cancer and birth defects in the villages adjacent to the about to be the plantations. The finest explanation of next superpower. the banality of the competing nationalisms of India and Pakistan was in a 9,000-word piece titled "The Coldest War," by Kevin Fedarko in Outside magazine. Fedarko spent months at the Siachen glacier on the India-Pakistan for celebrating what the U.S. press did, border, a region over which India and however flawed. Pakistan have been fighting for decades I grew up in Indian-administered at a cost of millions of dollars and hun- Kashmir, where a separatist rebellion dreds of lives. against Indian rule broke out in 1989 Indian writers who are serious about and where, to date, some 70,000 peodoing in-depth journalism also must ple have been killed. In the early 1990s, look to foreign venues to find a home Indian troops routinely tortured both for their work. The foremost Indian the separatist Kashmiri militants and nonfiction writer and essayist, Pankaj civilians whom they suspected of supMishra, for instance, publishes either porting or being militants. One morning in The New York Review of Books, The in 1991, when I was in high school, InNew York Times Magazine, or the Brit- dian soldiers herded all the residents of ish literary magazine Granta. Most In- my village onto the grounds of the local dian readers saw most of his pieces of hospital, and then searched our houses. reportage and essays only recently, when We were subjected to identity checks, they were published together as his latest and many teenagers from my neighborbook. Temptations ofthe WestHow toBe hood were taken into the hospital and Modern in India, Pakistan and Beyond. I interrogated. I still remember hearing asked Mishra how he felt about that, and the cries of boys being tortured inside

the hospital, and later seeing bruises and cuts on their bodies. Papa-2, the most infamous torture center in Kashmir, was housed in a colonial mansion on the banks of Dal Lake in the main city, Srinagar, and hundreds are believed to have been tortured there from the early to mid-1990s. While working on a book about the conflict in Kashmir, I interviewed many young men who had survived Papa-2. They carry deep scars on their bodies, some have lost kidneys, and many believe that because of electric shocks to their genitals they have become impotent, and as a result refuse to get into intimate relationships or marry. I knew one of those tortured men; he was the poetry teacher at my school. During the last seventeen years of the conflict in Kashmir, I have read many Indian newspapers and magazines but have yet to see a single magazine piece or detailed newspaper report in the Indian press examining the issue of torture. Privately, editors in India will say that cover stories about how Indian men and women behave in bed after age thirty sell more copies than cover stories about torture. Marie Claire rules. Maybe it isn't relevant to talk about sad things, such as the suicides of farmers and radiation sickness, when India is about to be the next superpower. Maybe 400-word news articles detailing the list of Indian billionaires in the leading English-language dailiesthe Times of India and the Hindustan Timesare enough, and nobody needs to connect any dots. Maybe that is why, in all the reports I read last fall in Indian newspapers about a delegation of Indian politicians that visited UN headquarters in New York in November to discuss ways of resolving the Kashmir disputea delegation led by Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, a former federal home minister of India and a native of Kashmirnobody mentioned that Sayeed lives in a refurbished colonial mansion on the banks of Dal Lake in Srinagar that used to be Papa-2. CJR
BASHARAT PEER IS Currently a fellow at

Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism and working on a memoir of the Kashmir conflict. Snowmen and Kalashnikovs: Dispatches from Kashmir, a collection of reportage he edited, will be published by Picador in India this summer.
COLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW 25

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