‘Support Journalists While They’re Alive’: The Wire’s Arfa Khanum Sherwani Awarded Chhatrapati Samman

Khanum Sherwani dedicated her award to the Palestinian journalists killed in the line of duty in Gaza.

New Delhi: Arfa Khanum Sherwani, The Wire’s senior editor, received the Chhatrapati Samman award on November 22, Wednesday.

Khanum Sherwani dedicated her award to the Palestinian journalists killed in the line of duty in Gaza.

“Don’t wait for journalists to get killed, support them while they are alive,” she said in her acceptance speech.

“Indian journalism is going through its worst phase in history. We are living in a time where journalists are being branded as terrorists and enemies of the nation. While the majority of the mainstream media has become an extension of Narendra Modi’s propaganda machinery, those of us who are still questioning the most powerful people and raising issues of the marginalised [communities] are being punished in the worst possible ways. The people in power are dehumanising journalists to a point where any action against them can be justified. They are being hounded and prosecuted under anti-terror laws,” she said.

“But in the last one decade, the rise of alternate media, a byproduct of the demise of legacy media, is good news for democracy. Despite limited resources, and against all odds, platforms like The Wire are doing the crucial job of informing and educating people about their rights and creating a more informed citizenry. Mass movements like the Shaheen Bagh movement and Kisan Andolan are proof that the battle of truth and democracy will be fought, and one day won by our poorest and most marginalised people.”

“The people in power and their supporters online and offline attack me and use my religious identity to discredit my work as a journalist. Despite rape and death threats, I remain undettered because my greatest support comes from ordinary viewers like you. But like Ram Chander Chhatrapati, people should not wait for a journalist to get killed, support them while they are alive,” she added.

Ram Chander Chhatrapati, who was editor of Poora Sach, published from Sirsa in Haryana, was killed on October 24, 2002. For him, journalism was a mission to take on the high and the mighty who misused their position to the detriment of the common people.

Chhatrapati had found incriminating evidence against Dera Sacha Sauda chief, Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh. He fearlessly published stories until he was murdered on the evening of October 24, 2002.

His standing as an impartial and courageous journalist is evident from the recognition accorded by esteemed figures in the field, including notable journalists such as Kuldeep Nayyar, Ravish Kumar, and Urmilesh. They expressed their honour in receiving the Ram Chander Chhatrapati Journalism Award, established by his friends and family posthumously.

India Performed Worse Than Average in Upholding 13 Basic Human Rights, Report Says

Among South Asian countries, only Pakistan had performed worse than India on protecting ‘quality of life’ rights.

New Delhi: India has performed worse than average in providing social and economic rights to its citizens when compared with its South Asian peers, a new report has revealed. India also performed poorly in providing civil and political rights to its citizens as compared to 37 countries, including the UK, the US, China, South Korea, Malaysia, etc.

The Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI) – a global initiative to track the human rights performance of countries – has come up with scores for 13 rights, of which India has excelled in only one, i.e, freedom from the death penalty.

The Rights Tracker initiative aims to measure “country performance of every human right in international law”, according to HRMI. “We have begun with a collection of civil and political rights (Empowerment and Safety from the State rights), and a collection of economic and social rights (Quality of Life rights), each measured by a different method,” the organisation says.

The 13 rights are: the right to education, food, health, housing, work (under ‘quality of life’); freedom from arbitrary arrest, forced disappearance, death penalty, extrajudicial execution, torture and ill-treatment (under ‘safety from the state’); and right to assembly and association, opinion and expression, and participate in government (under ’empowerment’).

According to its website, HRMI is hosted by Motu Economic and Public Policy Research in Wellington, New Zealand.

‘Quality of life’

India performed worse than average on ‘quality of life’ when compared with its South Asian peers when data from 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, is considered, the 2022 HRMI report said. It scored 65.1% on ‘quality of life’ when measured against the ‘income adjusted’ benchmark.

Source: HRMI 2022

“This score tells us that India is only doing 65.1% [against the ‘Income adjusted’ benchmark] of what should be possible right now with the resources it has. Since anything less than 100% indicates that a country is not meeting its current duty under international human rights law, our assessment is that India has a very long way to go to meet its immediate economic and social rights duty,” the HRMI report said.

When compared to the best-performing countries in the world, India’s score falls further to 61.6%.

Among South Asian countries, Bangladesh performed close to average on ‘quality of life’ rights with a score of 73.5%, while Pakistan’s score stood at 63.3%. Sri Lanka scored better than average (86.4%) in providing basic rights to its citizens in 2019. Nepal (74.9%) and Bhutan (75.8%) performed close to average.

The organisation did not rate Afghanistan’s performance because the data was incomplete.

In 2019, India ranked 102 of 117 countries on the Global Hunger Index, behind its neighbours Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh. In 2020, India was ranked 94th out of 107 countries. In 2021, its rank dropped to 101 out of 116 countries.

Safety from the state and empowerment rights

India’s ‘safety from the state’ score of 4.6 out of 10 – when data from 2021 is considered – suggests that many people were not safe from one or more of the following: arbitrary arrest, torture and ill-treatment, forced disappearance, execution or extrajudicial killing, HRMI said.

With respect to empowerment rights – which include freedom of speech, assembly and association, and democratic rights – India performed worse than average, scoring 4.5 out of 10.

Also read: The Supreme Court Has Made Progress. It Now Directs ‘Those Seeking Justice’ to Be Put in the Dock

As per the report, several individuals and organisations that either speak against the government or fight for their own rights or for others are at risk of having their right to freedom from arbitrary arrest violated. These people are also at a risk of having their right to assembly or association violated, it added.

They include human rights advocates, people from the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Dalit communities, religious minorities, non-violent protesters (including anti-CAA, anti-farm laws protesters), labour rights advocates, students, journalists (who covered protests and cases of sexual violence against women), Kashmiris (irrespective of their location), etc.

The data on ‘safety from the state’ and ’empowerment’ rights were compared with 37 countries, including the UK, the US, South Korea, Malaysia, etc.

In the ‘safety from state’ category, the UK scored 7.6 out of 10, the US 4.3, China 2.8, South Korea 8.3, and Malaysia 6.9. In the ’empowerment’ rights category, the US scored 6.1 out of 10, UK 5.4, China 2.1, South Korea 7.1, and Malaysia 4.9.

On June 26, human rights activist Teesta Setalvad, whose NGO was involved in litigating cases stemming from the 2002 Gujarat riots, was arrested, after the Supreme Court cleared Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was then chief minister of the state, of complicity in the violence. Several incidents of discrimination, violence and calls for genocide against Muslims, even in the presence of the ruling party leaders, were reported last year.

A journalist who had gone to Uttar Pradesh to report on the Hathras gang-rape case was arrested for sedition and Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA). Activists Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam, who were protesting against the anti-Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), were also arrested under UAPA for an alleged conspiracy to incite violence. All three of them are still in jail.

According to a report by media watchdog Reporters Without Borders, India is among the five most dangerous countries in terms of journalists killed across the world this year. Of the 46 journalists killed across the world last year for doing their work, India reported four fatalities after Mexico (7) and Afghanistan (6).

HRMI used an expert survey methodology in which it asked human rights experts, such as people working for human rights organisations; human rights lawyers; journalists specialising in social issues, and a series of detailed questions about government behaviour in the previous year.

For ‘Rapid Decline’ in Civic Freedoms, India Added to CIVICUS Monitor’s ‘Watchlist’

In its report, CIVICUS highlighted several developments that it saw as cause for concern. 

New Delhi: India has been added to a watchlist of countries that have seen a “rapid decline” in civic freedoms by an independent monitor, highlighting the drastic measures taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to silence critics of his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

India and Russia were added to CIVICUS Monitor’s Watchlist. CIVICUS Monitor is an online platform that tracks the latest developments to civic freedoms, including the freedoms of expression, association and peaceful assembly, across 197 countries and territories.

India has remained a “repressed” nation in the ‘People Power Under Attack 2021’ report by the CIVICUS Monitor, along with 48 other countries including Afghanistan, Russia and Hong Kong. Its rating was first downgraded in 2019, “due to a crackdown on human rights activists, attacks on journalists and civil society groups, and the assault on civic freedoms in Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir”.

This rating is typically given to countries where civic space is heavily contested by power holders, who impose a combination of legal and practical constraints on the full enjoyment of fundamental rights.

Meanwhile, other countries on the watchlist are El Salvador, Kazakhstan, Russia, Tunisia, and the UAE.

In its report, CIVICUS highlighted several developments that it saw as cause for concern.

In January, the Central Bureau of Investigation conducted raids on Madurai-based human rights watchdog, People’s Watch. The raid came against the backdrop of 6,000 other civil society organisations, including Oxfam, losing their foreign funding licenses under the controversial Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act.

Greenpeace and Amnesty International are among the civil society groups that have had to close their offices in India.

Meanwhile, scores of human rights defenders and activists remain in detention under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and other laws. They include the 15 human rights defenders linked to the 2018 Bhima Koregaon incident who have been accused of having links with Maoist organisations, based on evidence believed to be “fabricated”.

Waiting for bail, 84-year-old tribal rights activist Stan Swamy, who remained in custody since October 2020 in the Elgar Parishad case under UAPA, died in July last year.

Further, at least 13 activists who were arrested under the UAPA for their work against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) 2019 remain in detention. The slow investigative processes and extremely stringent bail provisions ensure that those detained under the law are held in pre-trial detention for long periods.

Also read: 21 European MPs Write to Modi Expressing Concern at Treatment of Rights Activists

“The office raids and foreign funding bans are part of the government’s strategy to harass and silence their critics,” said Josef Benedict, Civic Space Researcher for the CIVICUS Monitor. “The use of broadly worded anti-terrorism laws against activists, journalists, academics, and students, reflect a multi-year decline in the state of civic and democratic freedoms in the country.”

Journalists have continued to be targeted in India for their work in recent months and there have also been concerns about the widespread surveillance of activists, journalists and others critical of the Modi government following the Pegasus spyware expose.

“The government must release all human rights defenders detained and come clean about its surveillance of activists and journalists as well as establish an independent and effective oversight mechanism to monitor all stages of interceptions of communications,” said Henri Tiphagne, national working secretary of HRDA – India.

In Jammu and Kashmir, after the government read down Article 370 in August 2019, which granted the erstwhile state “special status” under the Constitution of India, hundreds were detained and restrictions were placed on internet access. Over 600 cases of human rights violations have since been locked up in the state’s Human Rights Commission, The Wire had reported this year.

The Wire had also reported that more than 25 people from the Kashmir Valley were selected as potential targets of intrusive surveillance between 2017 and mid-2019 by an unidentified government agency, believed to be a client of the Israeli company NSO Group.

In recent months, the government arrested human rights defender Khurram Parvez as well as journalists and taken control of the Kashmir Press Club – the largest independent media body in Kashmir

Myanmar Charges Jailed US Journalist Danny Fenster With Terrorism

The new charges levied by Myanmar’s military junta mean that Fenster, who has been detained since May, could now face a life sentence.


Jailed US journalist Danny Fenster has been accused of two more criminal charges by Myanmar authorities. Fenster, who is an editor of the independent news publication Frontier Myanmar, now faces charges of sedition and terrorism.

The maximum sentence Fenster could receive if found guilty is life imprisonment.

What has Danny Fenster’s lawyer said?

Speaking to news agency Reuters, Fenster’s lawyer Than Zaw Aung said the latest charges were a blow to his client. “We don’t understand why they added more charges but it is definitely not good that they are adding charges,” Fenster’s lawyer said.

“Danny also felt disappointed and sad regarding these new charges.” When asked about his client’s condition Than Zaw Aung said: “He has become quite thin.”

The US State Department has been pushing for Fenster’s release. Last week spokesman Ned Price said: “His detention, the detention of so many others, it’s a sad reminder of the continuing human rights and humanitarian crisis facing the country of Burma, facing the Burmese, but also facing foreign nationals, including Americans, who happen to be in Burma.” Price was referring to Myanmar, using the name it was formerly known as.

Also read: In 81% Of Journalists’ Murders Across the World Since 2011, Nobody Held Accountable

Why was Danny Fenster arrested?

Fenster was initially arrested in May as he made an attempt to leave the country for a family visit. He has been held for the past five months after being accused of incitement for allegedly spreading false or inflammatory information.

He was also charged for allegedly contacting opposition groups deemed to be illegal by authorities.

The military has arrested dozens of journalists since seizing power in February. Authorities have also restricted internet in a bid to stem the flow of information. The coup resulted in a wave of protests which were harshly dealt with by the military.

This article was originally published on DW.

Backstory: If the Media Fails to Read the Farm Struggle Right, Irrelevance Awaits

A fortnightly column from The Wire’s public editor.

The year is barely two weeks old and it has already seen events that have made visible the dangers of the cling film of alternative reality that has come to wrap itself tightly around societies across the world.

The Capitol Hill violence in Washington D.C., US served to highlight the hubris of a president convinced that he could upend history with his tweets. In the end, Donald Trump lost not just his “kingdom” and the key to that kingdom – his Twitter handle – but the prospect of a possible return to power given a second impeachment. The take-down of Trump, as a creature created by mainstream media and social media – let’s not forget his first delusions of grandeur were incubated on the sets of The Apprentice – has also provided the world with a critique of the gargantuan material presence of social media and their capacity to cultivate and drive authoritarian politicians.

The easy camaraderie between Trump and Narendra Modi, showcased in cash-fuelled events like ‘Howdy Modi’ in 2019 and ‘Namaste Trump’ in February 2020, was no accident. The Wire analysis, ‘Modi, Trump and Democracy in the Age of ‘Alternative Reality’ (January 15) lists interesting commonalities of their personalities and political style: both project the image of the alpha male; target opponents as enemies of the state; promote ethnic nationalism; prey on the fears the majority population may have of minorities and migrants; and deliberately misrepresent facts.

The big difference between the two men, the writer points out, is that unlike Trump who personally tweeted several times a day, Modi is careful to confine himself to official protocol and the occasional tweet, while allowing the BJP’s IT cell to do “the heavy lifting”. It is another thing altogether that the multiple institutional offspring of the Sangh parivar, with their mediatised armies of trolls, influencers and vigilantes, have been left unfettered to fabricate toxic scenarios to suit their agendas. If Trump through his tweets and posts could successfully plant the idea that the 2020 US election was stolen from him, the Sangh parivar’s spinmeisters have, among many other pursuits, made the image of the lustful Muslim man luring the innocent Hindu woman into the Islamic fold such an authentic construct that no evidence to the contrary can dissolve it, especially since it now comes burnished with the gravitas of legislation.

It would be difficult then to spot the difference between a Jacob Anthony Chansley, alias ‘QAnon Shaman’, who strode into the Capitol rotunda bare-chested and ensconced in a fur hat (‘QAnon and the Storm of the US Capitol: The Offline Effect of Online Conspiracy Theories’, January 10) in opposition to Joe Biden being declared president, and a Vijaykant Chauhan, so powerfully influenced by chief minister Aditya Nath’s campaign against ‘love jihad’ in Uttar Pradesh’s Saharanpur (‘A Day in the Life of a ‘One-Man Hindutva Army’ in Uttar Pradesh’, January 7) that he conducts tuitions for women titled, ‘How to identify a love-jihadi.’

Vijaykant Chauhan. Photo: Ismat Ara

It is here that the failure of India’s mainstream media (and I use the expression advisedly, many critiques have pointed out that they are neither mainstream nor often even ‘media’ in the accepted sense of the term) to act as a strong countervailing force to deliberately engineered swirls of divisive misinformation needs flagging. Newspapers and television channels now largely function as extensions of the politically privileged, social media-fuelled narrative which is why they have for the most part failed to respond adequately to one of post-independence India’s most important movements  – that of the farmers (‘For Farmers, This Agitation Is an Issue of Survival Against Corporates’, January 7).

This is why the media came so late into this story, long after the first signs of restlessness on the streets of Punjab and Haryana had grown into palpable anger. This is why today it is beyond their capacities to make sense of why hundreds of thousands of people – braving January’s icy winds and thunderstorms, suffering over 70 deaths in their ranks – have remained intransigent while repeating their one demand, ‘Repeal the three black laws’.

The media have long disbanded their agricultural bureaus and acquired an overtly pro-corporate slant. They have also privileged the urban consumer as their sole person of interest in the newsroom. It is hardly surprising then that today they neither have the language, understanding nor inclination to interpret the present crisis for their readers and viewers. They cannot perceive why there should be concern that the laws will ensure greater corporate control over the means of agricultural production since they are now trained to look on capitalists of all stripes as benefactors of the Indian economy.

Those who argue from their editorial perches on the market being the great enabler are congenitally incapable of voicing concern over the possible dismantling of the public distribution system. The mainstream media have over the years carried stories on farmers across the country courting death by suicide, but today these are invariably framed as individual tragedies arising out of wrong choices.

Within the media, there is also the expectation that somehow Narendra Modi will be able to handle this crisis with panache, just as he had all the other ones including Pulwama and the anti-CAA movement. They have in any case tended to view dissent of any kind with alarm, and the instinctive response within the newsroom is to frame protestors as anti-national. This proved spectacularly easy to achieve when it came to the anti-CAA movement given its distinct minority character, but with farmers, things are a tad more complex since the ordinary Indian perceives them as their annadata, or provider of life-giving food.

Nevertheless, the charge of farm unions being infiltrated by Khalistani-terrorist elements has been raised whenever possible and accusations of the sexual harassment of women journalists are being circulated without proof. Many a media house is now going into overdrive over fears that the proposed January 26 tractor rally could ruin the sanctity of Republic Day and create violence.

In addition, the attempt at all times has been to paint these protests as overwhelmingly confined to Punjab and Haryana. Almost every region in the country, including the four southern states, have witnessed demonstrations against the farm laws, but reportage on them has been either missing or muted. It was only the occasional, perceptive reporter who could see how Jat cohesion, for instance, was uniting northern India’s farming communities across states, or how unlikely solidarities were being forged across caste, class, regional, location and gender lines, which in turn is allowing the movement to keep growing.

Also Read: ‘We Are One’: Why Punjab’s Landless Dalits are Standing with Protesting Farmers

The farmers have understood not just the Modi government and its arrogance, but mainstream media and their abrogation to state power. From the earliest day, the media were viewed with suspicion. The possibility of fake news and government plants circulating on social media and throwing their ranks into confusion was to a large extent obviated by the protestors themselves generating their own media and social media content –memes, songs, videos, pamphlets and, yes, a newspaper. The Wire piece, ‘As ‘Trolley Times’ Captures Imaginations, Punjab Remembers Historic Newspapers of Protest’ (January 31), describes the ineffable sense of destiny in the first headline that appeared in ‘Trolley Times’, a weekly publication that was birthed amidst the trolleys of the protestors: ‘Unite, Fight and Win’.

‘Trolley Times’ is a publication by the farmers, for the farmers, designed to energise the protestors. Mainstream media cannot play that role obviously, but they could have displayed a sincere and empathetic interest in wanting to understand the issues animating these protests. Their failure to do so may well mean that the spectre of their own irrelevance will come back to haunt them.

A group of protesters read the Trolley Times at Singhu border. Photo: Kusum Arora

A cruel year for journalism

2020 will be recorded as a particularly cruel year for journalists in India. Many lost their jobs, others faced police brutality and even incarceration. As the piece, ‘Attacked, Arrested, Left Without Recourse: How 2020 Was for India’s Journalists’ (December 26) noted, even regulatory bodies failed to protect many hapless professionals: “The Press Council had been selective in upholding rights of the journalists and ensuring they are not targeted. In instances, it did not bother to fulfil its mandate. For example, the PCI swiftly intervened in the matter of the alleged attack on TV anchor Arnab Goswami, but remained silent over the issue of police filing FIRs against three journalists in Kashmir and invoking charges under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).”

The report by the Free Speech Collective, Behind Bars: Arrests and Detentions of Journalists in India 2010-2020, takes a decadal view of the repression and the figures it presents are educative. Over the last decade, “154 journalists in India were arrested, detained, interrogated or served show cause notices for their professional work”. Of these 67 were recorded in 2020 alone; 73 of them were in BJP-ruled states, with another 30 ruled by the NDA alliance, and 29 of them playing out in UP. The Congress/UPA rule between 2010 and 2014 saw 19 cases.

Meanwhile, South Asians for Human Rights (SAHR), a regional network of human rights defenders, highlighted the vulnerable state of journalists in Afghanistan. It mailed in a strong condemnation of the recent targeted killings of prominent figures including journalists and rights activists in that country. According to the Afghan Journalists’ Safety Committee, at least seven media personnel lost their lives in 2020, including two journalists killed in separate bombings in November and five journalists killed in the previous two months.

“Since early November, a series of targeted armed attacks and bombings have claimed the lives of former TOLO news presenter Yama Siawash, Radio Azaadi reporter Elyas Daee, Enikass TV anchor Malalai Maiwand, Ariana News presenter Fardin Amini and head of the Ghazni Journalists’ Union Rahmatullah Nekzad. Among others in civil society women’s rights activist Freshta Kohistani, Executive Director of Free and Fair Election forum of Afghanistan Yousuf Rashid, the acting health director of the prison Nafeza Ibrahimi, and Deputy Governor of Kabul Mahboobullah Mohebi and his secretary were killed in the past three weeks.”

The phishing attack on television anchor Nidhi Razdan that occurred in 2020, should also be flagged as condemnable and part of the same continuum of attacks on women in the media over the years. Here’s hoping that Razdan gets her mojo back and goes on to bring glory to the profession!

Representative image. Photo: Karnika Kohli/The Wire

We are women, watch us sow

Chief Justice of India S.A. Bobde’s remark that old people and women need not be there in the protests, betrays not just a patronising but extremely troubling patriarchal attitude. The blowback to his words came not just from feminists but farm groups and women farmers.  The piece by a woman activist in The Wire (‘CJI’s Remarks on Women Farmers Are an Assault on Human Agency and Constitutional Rights’, January 14) pointed out that the statement “takes women for granted and endorses infantilisation of labour by women…his stance portrays either ignorance or a deep sense of prejudice on the role of women in farming.” Lines from the press release of the Samyunkta Kisan Morcha, an umbrella body of farm unions, were also quoted:

During the Supreme Court hearing, it was said ‘Why are women in this strike? Why are women and elders ‘kept’ in this strike? They should be asked to go home’. The Samyukta Kisan Morcha condemns such statements. The contribution of women in agriculture is incomparable and this movement is also a movement of women.  It is shameful that women’s agency is being questioned. We strongly condemn this.

The CJI’s comment should come as a reminder that it’s time to recognise and reward the labour of the invisible woman farmer and agricultural worker.

§

Reporting on farm distress

Inderjit Singh Jaijee of Chural Kalan, district Sangrur, Punjab: The piece, ‘Hit By Indebtedness and Suicides, Punjab Farmers Worry New Laws Will Make Things Worse’ (December 29) was excellent. It was accurate, complete and fair. By seeking out many expert sources and visiting affected villages, you produced coverage that went far deeper than the usual superficial practice of three quotes and a photo.
Given the high credibility of The Wire and its wide readership, I am hopeful that this coverage will have an impact, not only on public opinion, but on those in a position to influence policy.

Rumi Samadhan: Have been ardently keeping up with The Wire’s articles and am struck by the acute sense of reporting by your team. Two articles in particular came through as markers – the uncovering of ‘Reality Belies Modi Govt Claims of Implementing Swaminathan Commission’s Report’ (December 29) and ‘Thirty Years After Liberalisation, a Look Back at the Various Pieces of the Puzzle’ (December 26). Both articles have crucially built interconnected understandings between liberalisation and the commodification of agricultural sector gamut. Cannot thank The Wire team enough for what it is doing at a time when we cannot protect our farmers, especially, from defamation and the laws untimely thrust upon them. We are living in a dark age of illusion and post-truth and seeing a dilution of media morality. Rational reporting is rare under such circumstances. These changing times require us to stand firm — and truthful.

Poor birds!

Vanshika Agarwal and Shashwat Agarwal, students at Nirma University and IIT Kanpur respectively, write in about the lack of bird control services and the apathy of the general administration of Jaipur to the plight of these innocent creatures, our birds:

We would like to draw the attention of the public towards the absence of administrative and legal clarity regarding access and utility of bird control services. This month of January is plagued with gloom for birds due to the spread of bird flu and loss of life due to injuries caused by kite strings. Multiple news outlets have reported deaths of hundreds of crows. We found ourselves faced with one such instance. A crow fell in the passageway of our house, delirious and unable to fly. Concerned at its precarious condition, we decided to call the bird control services to take it away and provide it with requisite treatment.

It is this decision of ours that led us to discover the apathy displayed by government organisations towards these creatures and lack of mechanisms to take care of such a foreseeable and fathomable situation. The first number (09828500065) we called at belonged to a bird control service, where the receiver of the call gave us another phone number. The second number (0141- 2374617) also apparently belonged to a bird control centre, where we were told that it is not the responsibility of their centre to take care of live animals and they can only do something once the bird is dead. We were again given two more phone numbers to call and see if anything can be done regarding live bird treatment. We then called the third place (9829022027), where we were told that there exists no mechanism wherein birds can be rescued and treated.

Subsequently, we called the Jaipur Collector Control Room (0141-2204475), where we were told that bird control centre does treat live birds and we were given another number to call. This number turned out to be the same number we had called in the beginning of this whole process (0141-2374617). The people at the second place and Collector Control Room jotted down our complaints but no action was taken and, anyway, they had mentioned that they don’t take care of live birds. We realised that this is an endless cycle and our requests will go in vain as there are no proper mechanisms in place to deal with such minor incidents, even though it’s been more than a week since the Rajasthan reported initial cases of bird flu. This whole ordeal reminded us of the needless bureaucracy, red-tapism, inefficiency and indifference experienced by Kanji Watanabe, the protagonist, at the hands of Japanese bureaucracy in the hugely popular film, Ikiru, directed by Akira Kurosawa. Although we don’t know if the bird is suffering from any disease or has suffered an accident, we are timid to approach it due to ongoing bird flu.

We want to draw the attention of the public towards the lack of administrative mechanisms that deal with the health and welfare of birds. It is hypocritical on the part of the government to demand observance of safety guidelines on the part of the public while it does nothing to solve the problems facing the birds.

A dead crow at Ramniwas Garden, in Jaipur, Saturday, January 9, 2021. An alert has been sounded across the country after the detection of bird flu cases in six states. Photo: PTI

The Wire In Bengali?

Dipankar Sen Gupta, from Agartala, Tripura: We have been following The Wire almost from the beginning. We lack such a portal in Bengali and are waiting for a Bengali edition. I remember the day I read, a while ago, the piece, ‘History Shows How Patriotic the RSS Really Is’ (April 17, 2017). I felt an urge to translate it into Bengali, my mother tongue. In fact, over the years, I have thought of writing to you to seek permission to translate some of the pieces published, but have always hesitated. Now The Wire comes in Hindi, Marathi and Urdu, other than in English, and I request you to start a Bengali edition. If not all the articles, two/three of your daily pieces could be translated and carried every day, apart from those written in Bengali.

Write to publiceditor@cms.thewire.in