Saturday, 27 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS Mann's roar in Majha!, starts AAP's election campaign in Gurdaspur for Shery Kalsi Mann in Amritsar -When the people of Majha make up their minds, they do not sway, this time they have decided to make AAP win Congress will provide 50 percent reservation to women in jobs: Lamba Haryana CEO takes first-of-its-kind initiative, State Voters to receive Wedding-Style Invitations for General Elections Wheat procurement gains pace as agencies procure 334283.4 MT grains Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla presents Road Safety Awards From Siliguri to a Chai Empire: How a Women Entrepreneur Brew a Successful Tea selling brand CHAIOM Science Fest organised at Rayat Bahra University Detaining the colonizer is a highly condemnable act - Gurjit Singh Aujla AIMS Mohali Observes DNA Day Vigilance Bureau Arrests Patwari Accepting Rs 10,000 Bribe For Mutation Of Land Vigilance Bureau Nabs Senior Assistant For Taking Rs 20,000 Bribe Vigilance Bureau Nabs Reader Of Sho Nri Police Station Taking Rs 20,000 Bribe SANY Heavy Industry India Pvt Ltd Expands Presence with Grand Opening of Raghunath Machinery HO in Rayagada, Odisha Ideathon 2K24 held at CGC Jhanjeri, 160 teams from various colleges participated Retailers Discuss Ways to Stay Ahead of the Curve at the RAI Hyderabad Retail Summit 2024 Bobby Deol Drives the Badass Seltos Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Euisun Chung Visits India to Underline Mid-to long-term Mobility Strategic Commitments Rupnagar police arrest accomplice of attackers involved in murder of VHP leader Vikas Prabhakar Complete exercise of identifying critical polling stations within this week : Sakshi Sawhney The impact of the Deputy Commissioner Dr. Senu Duggal strictness, a record jump in lifting in two days

 

27 Indian journalists investigating corruption murdered over 24 years

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

New Delhi , 01 Sep 2016

As many as 27 journalists have been murdered in India in direct retaliation for their work since 1992, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), a non-profit organisation based in New York.The CPJ's latest report, 'Dangerous pursuit: In India, journalists who cover corruption may pay with their lives', tells the stories of Jagendra Singh in Uttar Pradesh, Umesh Rajput in Chhattisgarh and Akshay Singh in Madhya Pradesh."The challenges faced by India's press are highlighted by the cases of Jagendra Singh, Umesh Rajput, and Akshay Singh. Corruption was the impetus for all three journalists' final reports and in all three cases, there have been no convictions," Sumit Galhotra, CPJ's Asia Program senior research associate, wrote in the report.

Freelancer Jagendra Singh, who died after being set on fire allegedly by the police in June 2015, was investigating allegations that a local minister was involved in land grabs and a rape. Before he was shot dead in January 2011, Umesh Rajput was investigating allegations of medical negligence and claims that the son of a politician was involved illegal gambling. Investigative reporter Akshay Singh was working on a story linked to the US $1 billion Vyapam admissions scandal -- tests for professional jobs run by the Madhya Pradesh government -- "when he died unexpectedly in July 2015".

Assam, Uttar Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir are the most dangerous areas to report from (statistics do not put Chhattisgarh in the top three), given their "volatile" institutional structures and "complex" civil societies, the report said.Reporters Without Borders (RSF), a global advocacy, called India "Asia's deadliest country for media personnel, ahead of both Pakistan and Afghanistan", IndiaSpend reported in April 2016.

The CPJ report also shows how small-town journalists face greater risks than those from larger cities, and how India's culture of impunity is leaving the country's media vulnerable to threats and attacks. "They rarely get support from their employers if they are targeted," Sujata Madhok, general secretary of the Delhi Union of Journalists, told CPJ. "The gulf between journalists working in rural or remote areas and those working in big cities is huge"."The language a reporter writes in and, most importantly, what they are writing about -- especially if it challenges the powerful -- increase the vulnerability," P. Sainath, co-founder of People's Archive of Rural India, wrote in the report."While rural and small-town journalists often have to cover multiple beats, those included in CPJ's list focused mainly on corruption, crime, and politics: three beats often closely intertwined," the report said. "This hasn't changed too much in the past three decades, but it has become worse with the retreat of the mainstream media from covering rural India in any depth."

Police are responsible for the first stages in any investigation, Geeta Sheshu, consulting editor of The Hoot, a media watchdog, told CPJ. "A faulty first information report, not applying the appropriate sections of the law, not clearly recording witness statements or protecting vulnerable witnesses, and not following up on preliminary investigations can be damaging."The CPJ has made various recommendations to the central government, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probing the death of Akshay Singh and Umesh Rajput, the Uttar Pradesh and Chhattisgarh state governments and the Indian media. 

These include:

Provide sufficient resources and political support to improve the capacity of authorities to conduct timely investigations and trials relating to crimes against journalists, including freelancers, bloggers, and those who publish news on social media;Immediately transfer the investigation into the 2015 death of Jagendra Singh in Uttar Pradesh from state police to the CBI; and employers should establish clear mechanisms for staff and freelancers to report threats, harassment, or attacks, and offer appropriate support.

 

Tags: PRESS , KHAS KHABAR

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD