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Indian media "vied" to beat war drums the loudest, in sharp contrast to Pak's: Top British weekly The Economist

By A Representative
In a scathing commentary on Indian media, the influential British weekly The Economist has said that IndiaтАЩs democracy may be тАЬstronger than PakistanтАЩsтАЭ, and тАЬless prone to coups and violenceтАЭ, with its minorities тАЬmore secureтАЭ than Pakistan's.
However, pointing towards how Indians тАЬassumeтАЭ that their media are тАЬfreerтАЭ, The Economist said, the country's media had failed to be тАЬnot much criticalтАЭ in examining of the governmentтАЩs actions on surgical strikes.
тАЬInsteadтАЭ, The Economic said in its commentary titled тАЬAll hail IndiaтАЩs press is more craven than PakistanтАЩsтАЭ (October 22), тАЬIndian media have vied to beat war drums the loudest.тАЭ
In sharp contrast, the weekly showed, how Pakistan's journalist Cyril Almeida, reported on tтАЭensions between the Pakistani army and civilian leaders over the border crisis with India, which began last month when infiltrators from Pakistan killed 19 Indian soldiers.тАЭ
The result was,earlier this month he was тАЬbanned from traveling abroad after writing a story that embarrassed PakistanтАЩs security forcesтАЭ, and when тАЬIndiaтАЩs tabloid press gloatedтАЭ, The Economist said, тАЬThe Schadenfreude proved short-lived.тАЭ
It said, тАЬTo general surprise, AlmeidaтАЩs colleagues rallied in noisy support. Pakistani newspapers, rights groups, journalistsтАЩ clubs and social media chorused outrage at his persecution. The pressure worked; the ban got lifted.тАЭ
On the other hand, the weekly said, тАЬWhen an army spokesman, providing very few details, announced on September 29 that India had carried out a retaliatory 'surgical strike; against alleged terrorist bases along the border, popular news channels declared it a spectacular triumph and an act of subtle statecraft.тАЭ
Without naming anyone, The Economist said, тАЬSome anchors took to describing IndiaтАЩs neighbour as 'terror state Pakistan'. One station reconfigured its newsroom around a sandbox-style military diorama, complete with flashing lights and toy fighter planes.тАЭ
Not just this, the journal said, тАЬA parade of mustachioed experts explained how 'our boys' would teach Pakistan a lesson it would never forget.тАЭ Calling it тАЬjingoismтАЭ which was тАЬpredictable, given the fierce competition for ratings among IndiaтАЩs news groupsтАЭ, it underlined, тАЬDisturbingly, however, the diehard nationalists have gone on the offensive against fellow Indians, too.тАЭ
Referring to NDTV and calling it a news channel with a reputation for sobriety, the weekly pointed towards how it тАЬabruptly canceledтАЭ the much advertised an interview with Congress leader and ex-finance minister P Chidambaram.
тАЬChidambaram was expected to say that previous governments had also hit back at Pakistan, but with less fanfare than the present oneтАЭ, The Economist said, adding, тАЬAn executive sniffed that it was 'not obliged to carry every shred of drivel' and would not 'provide a platform for outrageous and wild accusations'.тАЭ
тАЬArnab Goswami, the anchor of a particularly raucous talk show, has declared that critics of the government should be jailedтАЭ, the weekly regretted.
Pointing towards how тАЬextreme nationalists in Mumbai, IndiaтАЩs commercial capital, have urged filmmakers to ban Pakistani actorsтАЭ, the weekly said, things went so far that a film's director, Karan Johar, featuring Fawad Khan, a Pakistani heartthrob, had to air a statement тАЬdeclaring his patriotism, explaining that the film was shot before the current trouble and promising never again to work with talent from 'the neighbouring country'.тАЭ
In this backdrop, the weekly agreed with Chidambaram, wondering why was тАЬthe media toeing the government line so slavishlyтАЭ, saying, one answer to this question is, it has become more тАЬconcentrated in the hands of big corporations, many of which carry heavy debts and so are wary of offending the party in power.тАЭ
тАЬOthersтАЭ, said the weekly, тАЬAscribe the shrinking space for dissent to the unchecked rise of chauvinist Hindu-nationalist groupsтАЭ, with тАЬrepressive colonial-era laws on sedition and libelтАЭ playing тАЬa partтАЭ.
All this is happening, the weekly said, when the Indian public is тАЬtired of endless brinkmanship with Pakistan and yearns for stronger, more effective governmentтАЭ, insisting, тАЬOf course, to be truly strong and effective, governments need to tolerate and even heed critics.тАЭ

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