Pakistan may not have democracy in the sense the world knows. Nor  will it pass the muster in the economic field. But it has to its credit  independent judiciary and free media which the lawyers and journalists  have won after long battles in their respective fields. Bangladesh and  Sri Lanka cannot emulate Pakistan because both countries have  authoritarian rules. The judiciary and the media exercise independence  to the extent the leaders allow, although Bangladesh is a shade better  than Sri Lanka.
India is a different cup of tea. The country’s constitution and the  democratic system guarantee free functioning of both the judiciary and  the media.
Yet the baffling point is that the Manmohan Singh government,  battered by scams running to a loss of billions of dollars to the  exchequer and the Anna Hazare movement to have an anti-corruption Lokpal  (ombudsman), did not interfere in the functioning of either the  judiciary or the media.
However, while licking the wounds the government has begun a new way  of thinking: should the media and the judiciary have the freedom they  enjoy? It is like finding fault with the sea after the ship has been  wrecked because the captain failed to act. Home Minister P. Chidambaram,  Human Resources Development Minister Kapil Sibal and the experienced  Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee are reported to have urged the prime  minister to “do something” to correct the two.
For action against the media, the suppressed report by the Press  Council of India has come in handy. ‘Paid news’ is not to the liking of  journalists or the people. And it would help cleanse the field if the  guilty could be spotted and punished. But the government’s proposed  remedy is to give teeth to the council. Such a measure has been  discussed many a time and rejected because the Press Council is not  another law court, but a forum where peers judge peers. The sanction is  moral and ethical, not legal. The government’s proposal may defeat the  very purpose of the council. Talking to bodies like editors’ guild and  union of journalists may be more beneficial. I dare the government to  bring a bill to curtail press freedom.
The government’s mind is clear from the manner in which its  television network, Doordarshan, treated the Anna Hazare movement. It  just did not cover it — the biggest story since Gandhian Jayaprakash  Narayan’s movement in 1974. India’s tax payers finance Doordarshan. It  does not have to depend on advertisement. Readers or viewers would  always revert to private avenues to get the news. This is exactly what  happened when the Congress government imposed censorship in 1975.
Digging out cases
The fact is that no government wants a strong media or judiciary. It  has a way to indirectly influence the judiciary because the budgetary  allocations are made by the government. Media can be ‘disciplined’  through corporate sectors which have a large advertisement budgets.
Justice Sri Krishna suggested this in a report on Telangana. He did a  tremendous job in naming the leaders who killed Muslims in the 1993  riots.
His suggestion to the Home Ministry is that media should be tasked to  build opinion against separate statehood for Telangana. He has even  gone to the extent of recommending the use of government advertisements  as an inducement to turn the opinion in favour of a united Andhra  Pradesh. How naive he is.
Rattled by the Hazare movement, the government is playing its old  game by digging out cases against Hazare team members Prashant Bhushan,  Arvind Khejerwal and Kiran Bedi. And I do not know why Manish Tewari who  rescued himself from the standing committee should return to it? Is the  government serious about working of the standing committee? As for the  judiciary, the members of different parties are peeved over the obiter  dicta of judges’ while hearing a case. Such remarks never make part of  their judgement. For example, a Supreme Court judge said a few days ago  that people would teach a lesson to the government. This was a realistic  assessment against the background of the countrywide anti-corruption  movement. It is apparent the government and the opposition have not  liked the remark. But should parliament go overboard to counter it?
Giving vent to their annoyance, members of a house panel of  parliament have recommended to the government to set up a mechanism to  scrutinise the declaration of assets by the Supreme Court and High Court  judges (what about the cabinet ministers who too have declared their  assets?). But the bizarre proposal is that the media should be  prohibited from publishing names of judges under probe. This reminds me  of the days of the emergency (1975-77) when no judgment could be  published without clearance from the authorities.
BY : Kuldip Nayar.