Thursday 6 March 2014

Media’s freedom of expression, need for introspection


Not too long ago Delhi High Court had passed an order barring the newspapers and the TV channels (all media organizations) from reporting on a law intern’s complaint of sexual harassment against a former Supreme Court judge, (Justice Swatanter Kumar). A day after this order was passed, the Editors Guild of India in a statement said that the order made a mockery of the rule of law and the open and fair justice system by setting different and a very restrictive standards for the coverage of such allegations against judges (than what is applicable to any other citizen) and that this would mean an unwarranted intrusion on the media freedom.

Among the arguments marshaled by the Guild one finds the contention that such restrictions on the publication in a case such as this was uncalled for as this did not pose a serious threat to national security or would not lead to grave prejudice and miscarriage of justice. Also the presumed damage to reputation of a judge or any other person does not warrant prior restraint and would not pass the test of reasonableness under Article 19 (2) of the Constitution. There was also no justification for an assumption implied in this order that publication of mere allegations against an individual judge would inordinately and unjustifiably damage the image of the judiciary as a whole. The order for gag on the print and the electronic media also may not achieve a complete blackout since through social media and internet so much material continue to be disseminated in any case both within the country and outside.

It is the job of the media in a democracy to report court proceedings including court filings. Of course the only reasonable restriction should be that the reporting is accurate and fair. To lay down how and what exactly they should or should not report, including the type of headlines, whether or not the photographs of a public person should appear, when his images have been widely available in the media, is an avoidable intrusion into media freedom, the Guild said.

The Guild also emphasized the context of the current national debate on protecting women against sexual harassment where cases of this type raise important public issues of how to facilitate and deal with complaints by harassed women who may feel otherwise intimidated even to lodge a formal complaint with the police, who are apt to ignore them because the alleged perpetrators are well known and powerful people.

According to the Guild, responsible media houses can and should be trusted with conducting informed debate through complete and fair professional coverage of the case without critical information being held back from the public. On many similar instances, in the past, of alleged sexual assault and harassment it is only through sustained media pressure by holding open discussions with no prejudice to either the accused or to the judicial process that police have been forced to act and register cases.

Readers and viewers are generally mature enough not to mistake allegations for proof and would not assume that a person is guilty the moment a charge is published, the Guild averred and added that a judge who is trained to evaluate the evidence would be unlikely to be swayed by whatever is published.

On the face of it many of the arguments marshalled by the Guild is unexceptionable. The cumulative effect of deficit in governance and in the administration of justice in India has indeed made general public weary of the so-called ‘due process of law’ where due to sloth and corruption months elapse before police investigations are completed and charge sheets are produced. Charges are often diluted due to witness tampering through threats or inducements if the ‘accused’ happens to be an influential person. And then years pass before trials are completed in lower courts where often due to shoddy police investigation, witnesses turning hostile due to delay and/or manipulation and weak prosecution case, the ‘victim’ may not get justice to his/her satisfaction (if the case is not altogether dismissed). In case the justice goes in favour of the victim, the final closure of the case is indefinitely delayed due to challenges to such judicial orders in various higher courts where verdicts are many times overturned. Everybody spouts the statistics of the pending cases in the Indian courts. Only those fighting for justice appreciate the enormity of the odds against their goal.

It is in this hopeless environment that the dictum ‘one is presumed innocent till pronounced guilty by the courts’ (watch the plural which is indicative of the due process) appears like a cruel joke to the victim, his/her supporters and the public at large, who are becoming more and aware about such cases through media. And it is in this context that the new activist role that both the print and the electronic media in this country have started playing over the last several years can be understood and analysed. For the good it has done, and equally for its pretensions, motivations and the irreparable damage it can cause in some cases. It is as if the media in this country has found a way (which is also a commercially viable business model) for the general public to vicariously satiate its thirst for justice by providing a short cut through media trials conducted under its aegis. Editors Guild and the media in general are loath to give up this freedom and hence are protesting hard.

There can be no denying the fact that but for the wide dissemination in the media, debates, open and critical discussions (often critical of the judicial pronouncements) over the last several years the series of high profile criminal and corruption cases, especially those involving people occupying official and exalted positions, would not have the intense focus of public attention that they secured. Partly as a result of such a media pressure the government administration indirectly had to admit several lapses on their part, took some steps, though admittedly far short of what would have been desirable and in a fairly half-hearted manner. At least the need for ensuring accountability and transparency of many public institutions, government administration including police in particular, has gained currency.

By the same token, the process of justice and, in particular, judiciary itself, could not remain immune from this strong current of public scrutiny. Especially when individual members of this exalted institution have, time and again, shown themselves as susceptible to moral turpitude in corruption or sexual misdemeanour cases. The widely publicised case of Justice Soumitra Sen some years ago which went as far as potential impeachment by the parliament may be recalled.

Late last year, the allegation of sexually inappropriate behaviour against the retired judge Justice A. K. Ganguly by another intern was widely reported and discussed in the media, with pro- and contra-positions ranged in no-holds barred debates. Justice Ganguly, at the time the Chairman of the West Bengal Human Rights Commission, by and large maintained dignified silence through out the ugly, practically one-sided publicly conducted hate campaign (tendentious ‘leaks’ in the media about privileged documents to show him in poor light, insinuation and character assassination) and finally resigned from his position, which he said in his resignation letter that he was unable to do justice to in then prevailing environment. With his resignation, everybody including the media, having satiated the righteous indignation of a section of the public, lost interest and has put the matter in the backburner. Media has not informed us what progress, if any, has been made on the original case (like filing a charge sheet in a court of law) of the sexual misdemeanour of the judge.

Justice Ganguly did not resort to a defamation suit to remedy the loss of reputation he had obviously suffered, though he could have. Many participants in the media debates at the time even questioned his silence. Probably they did not know or care to respect his fundamental right to silence even as an accused of an alleged conduct.

In the light of the defamation case filed by Justice Swatanter Kumar at the Delhi high court and the court’s order about the restriction of the ‘freedom of press’ which the Editors Guild vociferously protested as above, certain issues about the freedom of expression in and by the media again come into sharp focus. Despite Guild’s protestations about the sense of responsibility or the sense of proportion of the media institutions about maintaining fairness and balance in presentation, any independent observer of the kind of media debates conducted these days on most issues of public importance including ongoing criminal and or corruption investigations and court cases will find it difficult to vouch for the media’s ability to fulfill those responsibilities.

Media’s freedom of expression has to be valued. An independent media in India have demonstrably strengthened our democracy by informing the lay public, raising pertinent   issues of governance or the lack of it, have been bold enough (and in the process have emboldened ordinary people) to question some of the privileges that those in high places in our society and political-government establishment have been habituated to exercise in an axiomatic manner. But this democratization process has, unfortunately, generated an irreverence (a particularly cheap, sweeping and strident form of the tendency) about all or most of our institutions for governance and the constitutional procedures. For its claim to freedom of expression to be respected the media has to eschew its current tendency to play to the gallery, settle for the lowest common denominator. It should reform and refine its own news generation and dissemination functions so as to maintain the fine balance between public’s democratic right to know and an individual’s (even an accused) equally right to silence if only as a part of his/her democratic right of defence, including that of his/her reputation. There is a danger in media’s playing a moral crusader, a vigilante role.