BY MIAN ABRAR
Ministry of Defence
asks media to get content verified by Army before publishing it
Left red-faced with
the publication of news items contradicting previous claims of the Indian army
that the terrorists involved in Uri attack carried weapons of “Pakistani
markings”, the Indian government has introduced unprecedented media gags.
In a new direction to
the media, the Ministry of Defence of India has issued a new direction to
editors, stating that “all contents relating to the Indian Army, irrespective
of ‘source’ of inputs, and intended to be published, should be pre-verified
from the offices of media centres in commands and corps HQ or from this office
through your defence correspondents”.
The MoD was responding
to a story published in the Indian Express on September 21 which refuted the
claim made by Lt Gen Ranbir Singh, Director General of Military Operations
(DGMO), during interviews to journalists that the weapons recovered from the
four slain terrorists who killed 18 Indian soldiers at Uri on September 18 bore
“Pakistani markings”.
Writing in the Indian
Express, Sagnik Chowdhury and Praveen Swami had reported, “Four Kalashnikov
rifles used by the terrorists, and handed over by the military to investigators
Monday, bore no markings or insignia of any kind, sources familiar with the
ongoing investigation said. There were also no military markings on
barrel-fired grenades destroyed by the Army Monday, or on launchers fitted on
the Kalashnikovs”.
Indian MoD’s demand
has no legal basis – no government body has the right to censor or screen news
before it is published, and freedom of the press is enshrined in the law via
the constitutional right to free speech.
Israel is the only
country with an otherwise unrestricted media where all media outlets –
including bloggers and foreign journalists based there – are subject to a
military censor when it comes to the reporting of news about Israeli military
matters. Military censorship in Israel began in the 1960s as part of an
understanding between the army and the media houses but eventually got
established as a legal prerogative.
Though the defence
ministry now says the Indian DGMO never made this claim – and cites the formal
press release he had issued on the evening September 18 to buttress its point,
the fact of the matter is that several media outlets had quoted Indian DGMO as
saying so to TV channels for more than a day without the MoD or General Singh
feeling the need to issue a denial.
Indian media has reported that not only has
the director, media in the MoD, Abhijit Mitra – who is a serving colonel in the
Indian army – now demanded that the newspaper “publish an errata and apology
for having published a report full of falsehood” but that henceforth it submit
reports on the army to be “pre-verified” by the relevant corps or command media
office.
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