nd now it is the BBC `Rath Yatra’ which has hit the
road. Though they call it a caravan the bus carrying a
team of broadcasters, correspondents and producers
belonging to its Hindi service somewhat resembles the
chariot of modern day politicians in India. The
primary objective of their visit to every nook and
corner of a vast part of North India is to promote
their brand. Collecting some news on the way was only
a secondary objective. A unique method of marketing in
the post-Hutton Commission days indeed!
But what is the BBC. Call it by any name you wish. It
can be the Blair Broadcasting Corporation as the
British Prime Minister has now proved. Or is it the
Bush Broadcasting Corporation as its head office in
London is situated in the complex called Bush House.
And in the aftermath of 9/11 the Blair-Bush
Corporation does not sound very outlandish. At present
it is Bharat Broadcasting Corporation as its team is
criss-crossing Ganga-Jamuna belt. At least for its
Hindi service one can conveniently use the sobriquet
Bihar Broadcasting Corporation as, according to its
own version, almost half of the journalists working in
Delhi and London studio are from this benighted state.
Incidentally, of all the states in the country it is
on Bihar that the team is concentrating most. In this
almost two months long caravan the BBC team visited 15
districts of Uttar Pradesh, mostly in its eastern
half, while the tour of Bihar is still underway. Here
they will visit 26 districts, including the state
capital Patna. Though Hindi is spoken––or at least
understood––almost all over the country save in some
pockets of South India it is intriguing as to why the
World’s one of the biggest news network is
concentrating only on the cow-belt.
There is a large BBC listeners in east Uttar Pradesh
and Bihar––the most backward and much more densely
populated region of the country––as there are fewer
television sets in the rural areas and power supply is
erratic. Besides, students living in hostels,
shopkeepers, village folk, travellers and those
hailing from the lower middle strata of the society
still tune to radio. And in this post-liberalisation
age backwardness sells better than anything else. Of
course, the election time is certainly the best time
for such an exercise. The BBC alone is not the
culprit, other television channels and newspapers too
sell their products according to the demand.
The BBC team is spending one day in each of these
places till March 26 talking to people cutting across
the social barriers and holding debates and panel
discussions on the various topics at any local hotel,
school or college complex. Prominent citizens of each
of these places are invited and their views
highlighted in evening and morning programmes of Hindi
Service. They are seeking the listeners’ view on the
programme and want to adjust to their demands.
Sam Miller, Managing Editor of the BBC World Service,
South Asia Region, said: ``Our research consistently
shows that listeners in Bihar are asking for richer
and more varied content that is relevant to their
daily lives.’’ It was keeping this in mind that they
have taken up programmes on career and teaching of
English in Hindi service.
According to Achala Sharma, head of the BBC Hindi
Service, who was with the team in most of the places:
``BBC Hindi values the comments and opinions of the
listeners. Through the Voice of the People roadshow in
Uttar Pradesh we managed to develop on going
relationships and create forums which will further
allow listeners to voice their views on even broader
platform. We are looking at building similar
relationships with the people of Bihar.’’
The British Broadcasting Corporation has over the
decades undergone a sea-change. Just like the earlier
British ruler in India or in other colonies the BBC
relied wholly on the white-skinned personnel in the
initial days. They normally used to recruit only
broadcasters in different languages as that was their
compulsion. Mark Tully, Sam Miller, Eric Silver, Alex
Brodie, Alexander Thomson are some familiar non-Indian
names who worked in the BBC in the sub-continent.
However, Mark Tully, who incidentally was born in
India, is now more Indian than anyone else and can
speak Hindi well.
Then came the likes of Satish Jacob and stringers like
Sam Rajappa in South and Tooshar Pandit (based in
Kolkata) for the East. The BBC would appoint one or
two stringers in big cities and would often rely on
the local correspondents of different papers for the
news in respective states or regions.
However, in 1990s the phenomenon started changing. The
BBC even launched a Hindi television news bulletin in
collaboration with the Home TV, but the idea failed to
click and within a few months it has to close down the
telecast.
Gradually Bharatiya-karan (call it Indianisation) of
the BBC started. Now a full-fledged office started
functioning in Delhi with Seema Chisti at present its
Editor. In most states it started having its own
correspondent and concentration on India increased.
Sometimes even small and less relevant news items were
highlighted by BBC correspondents while important
development elsewhere were downplayed.
Ironically, the BBC now has no correspondent of its
own South of Hyderabad, which is manned by Umar
Farooque. This notwithstanding the fact that there
are several happening cities like Bangalore, Chennai,
Trivandrum etc situated there.
The BBC team throughout the tour insisted that they
honour people’s opinion and respond accordingly. But
this claim can be taken with a pinch of salt. Firstly,
while broadcasting people’s voice from each district
in their Hindi programmes the BBC conveniently ignored
those comments, which were extremely critical of its
style of propaganda.
And if the BBC is so sensitive to people’s demand than
one day it is feared it would end up becoming an
entertainment programmes as many people would like to
listen to songs rather than lend their attention to
news. Thus it is not that the BBC blindly accepts the
people’s demand. The big question is as to why the
listeners of Hindi and Urdu Services deprived of some
interesting programmes and interviews broadcast by its
English Service and forced to listen to some trivial
incident in India or Pakistan?
The Hindi Service bigwigs, in most of the places they
went, were quick to deny that they work under any
pressure or that a Lakshman Rekha, has been drawn by
their bosses, which they can not cross while
reporting. After Hutton Commission Report can their
version be believed any more?
The BBC reporters may to some extent be fair to their
professional duty. But may one ask as to why was it
reminded of exposing the government on Iraq war after
everything was over, thousands of innocent lives lost
and the American and British soldiers failed to find a
single weapon of mass destruction (WMD). In the
pre-Iraq war days the BBC never launched any concerted
campaign against the American and British design
against Iraq when every one, including UN weapon
inspectors, was saying that post-1991 Iraq cannot
afford to make any small weapon, not to speak of WMDs.
The world knows that the BBC is run on the grant from
the British government and whatever they may say about
journalistic freedom the fact is that those working in
it can not cross a certain boundary.
In this age of media war 8,000 correspondents and
cameramen from all over the world, obviously most from
the West, converge on the difficult terrain of
Afghanistan. These unarmed tribe of scribes reached
there even before the western forces could arrive.
Incidentally, the number of western army on the Afghan
soil was less than these journalists. The US and
British forces fought their whole war from the air and
actually started landing only when the Taliban finally
left.
It is not the BBC alone, which has undertaken the
damage limitation exercise. In the post-Iraq days the
Voice of America too has changed its policy. Now its
Urdu Service is called Radio Aap ki Dunya and not
Voice of America, as the latter sounds unpleasant to
the Muslim listeners.
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