By Nitin Mehta
The 70th anniversary of Indian Independence has created a frenzy of media interest in the UK. Apart from many television documentaries, there have been acres of coverage in the print media. Almost all of it is negative and has portrayed India and Indians as intolerant people who are persecuting minorities.
First off the mark was the Guardian newspaper, where Mihir Bose penned an article on 2 August 2017. After listing some Indian achievements, he had the following to say: “After the victory of Narendra Modi the country seems to be turning its back on the tolerant, secular society that India’s founding fathers wanted. Modi has always ridden two chariots: what one prominent Indian businessman, and an old friend of mine, called Modi’s real business of making India prosperous; and his Hindu business of appeasing his fanatical Hindu followers. Modi has proved a timid reformer, whose tinkering has included an overnight demonetisation that led to such chaos that people died. In contrast, his Hindu followers have been given free rein to believe that Ram Rajya, the mythical rule by the revered Hindu god Ram, has finally arrived. This has seen a ban on the slaughter of cows, and a growing intolerance of minorities.” On 5 August in the same paper a host of writers led by Salman Rushdie and Pankaj Mishra could not bring themselves to acknowledge a single Indian achievement. For them, India was a lost case, a failure.
Here is a country which is a vibrant democracy surrounded by countries where there is no freedom and where civil wars have taken place. Here is a country which started with nothing in 1947, but is now the world’s fastest growing economy. These things do not impress these “liberals”. On 15 August 2017, BBC 2 Newsnight held a discussion on the partition. It was a programme of unrelenting negativity on India. The programme presenter had the temerity to say that Gandhi had failed in his attempt to liberate India in a non-violent way and that he was irrelevant in 1946. Again and again the subject of cow vigilantes was brought up. The worst part is that the so called India experts of Indian origin were even more vicious than the other guests. The first expert was Professor Sunil Khilnani, who holds the India Chair at Kings College. He said Modi was talking harmony but failing to stop Hindu violence. And then came the familiar refrain: “As an Indian I am very worried the way India is going under the current leadership.” The other panellist, Professor Joya Chatterji from Oxford University compared the partition to something like Brexit and there was laughter in the audience. When a lie is repeated again and again, it gains respect. Thus India has been portrayed as intolerant and you know it has worked when your own children begin to repeat this mantra. A country which has given shelter to persecuted Parses, Jews, Tibetans has been stigmatised as intolerant!
The extent of BBC’s bias against India was witnessed with their coverage of the Ram Rahim Singh episode and the India-China standoff. BBC correspondent Soutik Biswas said that the guru saga showed how deeply divided India and Indian society were. A bit dramatic, I thought. There are any numbers of Christian gurus who are caught in scandals, but no one says UK is hopelessly divided. Regarding the India-China standoff, BBC correspondent Sanjay Majumdar quoted Atul Bhardwaj, who is Adjunct Fellow at the Institute of Chinese Studies in New Delhi. According to him, India had abandoned Bhutan because India wants Chinese markets and Chinese investments. India, he said, had withdrawn its troops. There was no mention of Chinese withdrawal. Lastly, BBC correspondent Justin Rowlett penned an article about the government’s total failure in the demonetisation drive. He asks a rhetorical question: why were Indians not angry over the note ban failure? He answered the question by saying that a lot of people find all the big numbers and complex details difficult and frankly dull. In other words, a lot of Indians were not bright enough to understand the subject. He added that in a country as poor as India people have more pressing issues to worry about.
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