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Patna, (Bihar Times): Editor and writer, M J Akbar, has
been kicked out of the Asian Age and Deccan Chronicle
after dispute over policy matter. He was
editor-in-chief of both the newspapers. Though Akbar
said he had been removed because of conflict of
editorial viewpoints his decision to contest Rajya
Sabha election as National Democratic Alliance
candidate from Bihar has much to do with his sacking.
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According to media reports Akbar and Deccan Chronicle
Holdings Ltd, which had a majority stake in Asian Age
Holdings parted ways a few days back.
He told Khaleej Times, a Gulf daily, “I wanted an
independent line, whereas the Deccan Chronicle
management was insistent that I be supportive of the
pro-establishment, government policies...I haven’t
quit; I have been forced out.”
He rubbished rumours of serious differences between
him and the Deccan Chronicle on the issues of stake
holdings. According to reports, he is holding 10 per
cent in the Asian Age Holdings Ltd, while the rest 90
per cent is being held by the Deccan Chronicle; a fact
that Akbar outrightly denies.
Reports said that ever since Deccan Chronicle
increased its holding to 90 per cent from a meek 23
per cent in May 2005, there were disagreements between
the two.
It needs to be mentioned that Akbar left The
Telegraph, as its founding editor in 1989 to join
Congress Party. He fought and won election from
Kishanganj parliamentary seat on the Congress party
ticket. Throughout the Bofors years he solidly behind
the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and continued to
write By-Line, the name of his column for The
Telegraph. However, after Akbar lost the 1991 election
he launched Asian Age. in 1993. It used to come out
from Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai and London. He presided
over the rise and fall of this newspaper. Now he has
been thrown out from the very newspaper he launched.
People close to him holds Congress President Sonia
Gandhi responsible for his removal. But Akbar’s
proximity with the BJP is a known fact. In 2004
parliamentary election he even campaigned for the then
external affairs minister, Yashwant Sinha, in
Hazaribagh.
Akbar, who became the youngest editor of the
Kolkata-based weekly magazine Sunday in mid-1970s was
out and out anti-BJP throughout his earlier years. He
shot into fame for his writings against the communal
riots in Jamshedpur, Meerut, Moradabad etc. He also
took stand against the BJP throughout the Ram
Janambhoomi movement years.
Today he is in the same BJP––the party against which
he stood so solidly for so many years.
Akbar, however, said: “I am independent, and will
remain independent. I, as a journalist, have many
friends in the politics. Why should I not have
political acquaintances and contacts?” “I am not going
to be defeated so easily”.
Whatever be Akbar’s claim the fact remained that he
was once a Congress loyalist, now strongly with the
BJP. And in his capacity as editor he had sacked
several journalists just for the sake of possessing
different viewpoints. One of them to be removed was
Soroor Ahmed, the then Special Correspondent of the
Asian Age in Patna, (and now a free-lance journalist
who contributes for BiharTimes.com too) a few days
after the accident of Rajdhani Express on September 9,
2002.
Comments...
it is sad that people still consider m.j. akbar a journalist. with so much of sleeping with politics he should stop treating himself a journalist. one could be either of the two, not both. but problem is with the people who still get confused and believe that a two in one role is possible like a phone and camera, or phone and music player. all such people destroy journalism, politics is destruction-proof.
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Sunil Kumar
editor.chhattisgarh@gmail.com
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Very insightful biography of M J Akbar. One didn't know he had so many
political adventures...i thought he was simply a journalist. But what a
pity, Asian Age was a good paper, one of the few which covered
'Islamic' issues sympathetically, and one that gave a variety of
viewpoints on the Nuke deal.
Pankaj Gupta
ISEC, Bangalore.
lodhiroad@gmail.com
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