At another edition of IAA Conversations, which preceded the first
edition of IndIAA Awards, author and journalist Shankkar Aiyar spoke
with Dr Subhash Chandra, chairman, ZEEL and Essel Group.
The preceding conversation covered domestic news media ownership
issues, separating news and opinion, and corrupt media practices, under
the overarching theme of 'News Neutrality'. Here are edited excerpts.
Shankkar Aiyar (SA): Let’s set the ground in terms of
what is news neutrality. As a consumer of news I look for accuracy and
speed. As a journalist myself I believe everyone is entitled to their
opinion, but not to their own facts. As a pioneer and media baron what
is your view on what exactly is news neutrality?
Dr Subhash Chandra (DSC): I have always been telling
my colleagues as a publisher that we are in the business of giving
information. We are not in the business of telling people what is good
or bad, or right or wrong. But invariably people do get into their own
thoughts and this gets mixed up. Then it is no more neutral. First, the
reporter who gathers the news has his own views in it. Then, it’s the
input editor or output editor and the likes who add to it. Then, the
anchor has his or her views. Then, the editor adds views too. Then if
there’s anything left – the publisher comes in with views. So, the
neutrality is over. Neutral means reporting as it is. You just simply
report as it is and probably give the reasons for that happening; and to
give the reader or viewer more information, go back to the history and
stuff like that. These are value additions but won’t hurt the news
neutrality.
SA: Basically you’re saying that the principle business of publications or news channels is to inform and not to reform?
DSC: Yes. The media owner or editor see themselves as the arbitrator of society – that’s when they go wrong.
SA: As a consumer of news – you watch other channels and read
other newspapers. What are your observations? The general feeling is
that now news is not about what happened and where it happened but about
why it happened...
DSC: Well, there is the quality of news dissemination –
it’s gone down in terms of quality and neutrality, both. If my
25-year-old girl gathering the news goes to somebody whose father has
died and asks ‘how do you feel now’ – it’s bad. I mean if the person has
lost his father – how will the person feel? So these kinds of things
are happening. Today, it’s become byte journalism. Just take bytes. I
have caught people who are sitting in office, seeing news on the
internet, adding or subtracting something from it and taking a byline
for it. So, such things are happening. Again, as I said the only way it
can be done is if one keeps their objectivity.
SA: You spoke about objectivity. It’s a term that was taught to
us when I started in the '80s. But different people have different
views on it. Arun Shourie would always say (as an editor) he has a right
to give an on opinion on how news is covered – he used to say
objectivity is not giving equal space to the fireman and the one who set
the fire. He said we are losing this hierarchy. Yesterday’s big news
was Sudheendra Kulkarni’s blackened face. Most channels went ahead of
the curve and started explaining why it happened and what is India’s
relationship with Pakistan and stuff like that. Your publication has
condemned it – but how does one cover this?
DSC: This is the thing for which collectively everyone
in the news organisation is responsible. It’s not only from the
publisher to the reporter but also the consumer as well. Our business
people responsible for the revenue feel (and rightly so) that whenever
there’s sensational news there are more TRPs and that sells more. So
more advertising revenue comes in. Even I personally have experienced
some cases – atleast two cases. Where one of you (referring to the
attendees of the event) have had something wrong published about you and
as a media owner I’ve got calls between 7 and 8.30 (in the morning)
about the same. I’ve done this plenty of times because in the night the
news channel, be it Hindi, business or a language channel, has put out
some story, and I’ve got calls saying that it has published something
wrong about the person. So, one large business house head stopped
advertising with us. They would have budgets of Rs 30 to 40 crore and
they said they wouldn’t advertise with the Zee Group.
SA: That was my next question – news is a business and it
survives on viability and it has issues. How do you balance compulsions
and competition? Competition drives you to break news and compulsion is
for revenues?
DSC: Our solution to this is to take their version of
the subject. We definitely take their point of view and say that also.
Even then if they get angry, you can’t help it. That’s why I say that I
have more angry people against me only thanks to my editors and news
gathering people. Personally I have nothing against them and they have
nothing against me. But you have to live with that or exit that
business.
SA: You said that you have to take the other person’s view. The
structure of news gathering is such that the junior most person goes to
the field to file the report. By the time it climbs up, there’s quite a
huge, maybe terabytes of footage going around. As an owner how do you
ensure that basic norms are safe guarded?
DSC: This was happening a lot at our channels too. I’ve had instances of this.
For example, think of the town Hoshiarpur in Punjab. Some local
businessman or builder has been caught and there’s some evidence of a
wrongdoing. Nowadays, with the regulations and restrictions it is very
easy to find wrongdoings. The stranglehold on the system and corruption
are in such a way... A place like Hoshiarpur has a population of maybe
2,00,000 out of which maybe 50 people are in the field of
administration, politics or business. Of these 50, for 90 per cent it
could be easy to get a story. So, one makes a story, picturises it and
goes to one of the agents in the town. They talk to the agent about it
and claim that this is the story and it could be running on Zee Punjab
or Haryana the next day. Then, they ask for Rs 5,000 for not running it
and Rs 1,000 for running it. Outside police stations in Haryana, news
media has brokers sitting. If policemen are not taking a FIR or
reporting something, even a victim has to pay money to get this
highlighted and reported. So, that’s why one channel has done a smart
thing – appointed a stringer and charged Rs 50,000 for one. This happens
across levels – even editor and sub-editor level. We haven’t been able
to stop it but we have put technological engines in place, which will be
used post January 2016. The moment somebody starts working on a story
or any news – there is no way it won’t get recorded through the
technological engine itself. And what happens with the story up to what
level will be available. We feel this will help us control biases about
the story by about 90 per cent.
SA: One of the basic issues about neutrality or objectivity
stems from ownership. Corporate or political ownership. Recently the
editor of a newspaper has written a book in which you have substantial
and honorable mention. Before I get to that part, what is your view on
big business owning big media?
DSC: Before we go to this question, I would like to
say first we have to determine the ownership itself. Who is owner?
Today, in television news media – India has the highest news television
channels in all languages. They run into almost 300. I can bet that 70
per cent of them are owned by people who are not eligible to own a news
channel. The law is very clear that no political party should own any
news channel. No religious group should own any channel. But still they
do. Also, the ownership of the channels are very, very opaque. I won’t
be surprised if one or two channels are owned by Dawood Ibrahim. One
will never be able to find out, because the execution of the law is very
weak. A prominent channel is owned by a chartered accountant in Delhi.
His practice is Rs 70 lakh a year. I’m sure he must be spending Rs 20 to
30 lakh out of that. Yet, he owns a channel. That channel loses 15
crore a year. Where does the money get funded?
SA: So his loss is profit to someone else?
DSC: Has to be. The law of economics is that both
debit and credit side have to be equal. It can’t be working like this.
So, firstly what we are going to suggest to the government of India, and
we are working on it, and hopefully in the next 30 days after the Bihar
election we get some traction: the ownership of news media must be
checked out after removing the corporate veil. To reach to the ultimate
source... that is important.
The second issue about corporates (owning news media) – I know one
media house that has not made any money in the last 17 years. Every year
they are losing money, still they are spending like there’s no
tomorrow. Some corporates have given them Rs 400 to 500 crore on zero
interest. Who is the owner of that company then? That’s the question I
ask you.
SA: In print media one publishes this form IV where you’re
supposed to reveal owner, directors and so on. News channels don’t seem
to have any such format?
DSC: There is a format. But, the thing is that the
government is not going behind that. Simply saying whoever is worth say
Rs 5,000 to 20,000 crore, gets clearance from the ministry of home
affairs, he can launch a channel. It’s like me catching my driver and
launching a channel on his name. If I give him Rs 10,000 crore and ask
him to launch a channel he’ll be allowed to. The ministry won’t have any
issues with his security clearances. For Subhash Chandra’s security
clearance, they’ll see 10 things about the history and question me, but
what will they ask the driver? So, he’ll get the clearance and then
anyone can run the channel.
SA: What channel Subhashji is talking about a lot of us
probably know. I call this seasonal ownership. The channel was bailed
out by the UPA first. Then the loans went abroad. Then (back) inside.
Now they’re currently again looking for a bail out, if I’m not mistaken.
I don’t remember them ever making money. The beauty is that there are
channels which are listed, have high profile fronts and nobody really
knows the backing?
DSC: Firstly you need clear transparency in the
owners. Corporate ownership – what is wrong with it? The constitution
allows it. I’m a free citizen and can do whatever. I’ve got nothing
against large corporate or business houses owning the media.
SA: Even business channels?
DSC: As long as you maintain your objectivity it’s
fine. It’s not illegal in my own opinion. You can call it unethical or
some other word, but one can’t say that you can’t own it.
SA: Sundar (Swamy) mentioned it in his opening remarks – there’s a euphemism called paid news...
DSC: Yes and it is wrong.
We’re launching an English news channel, in which we’re certainly
taking some advertisers as founding partners and we will give them good
pricing and rates, but not anything else. But, in this industry it
happens that if one doesn’t advertise, the channel gets on their case. I
remember one case with Maruti. Zee News broke something about it. After
three days, a different news media company took it to a large high that
Maruti’s stock price fell by about Rs 600 and the chairman of the
company was going around in circles to explain to people. Ultimately he
told me personally that it happened because Maruti didn’t advertise with
that media house. So such things happen.
SA: There has been in the last year – when you were covering
the coal scam – an allegation about your channel’s editor meeting a
corporate and asking for ads or else something would be shown. How do
you explain this to a viewer?
DSC: I was doing a show at Manipal University. That
has been aired also, and it can be seen on YouTube. The question was
similar – how credible is news media? First and foremost, nobody
blackmails anybody for money through cheques. Courts have examinated us.
Supreme Court has cancelled all those (coal) blocks. So what we have
been saying was correct. Whatever is alleged makes no difference then.
I can only say that the gentleman – the corporate you were talking
about – is saying he wants to compromise and settle this. We are simply
saying just say you were wrong and made a wrong case. And I have no
hesitation in saying this that the case was completely politically
driven. This corporate was also made party to it.
Zee News was the only channel that was highlighting the scams the UPA
government was doing. It’s not only the coal scam. It was the UPA
government leaders who colluded with this corporate and did this. This
is the reason for me openly being against a political party, for the
first time, in 2014. I told my people we have to be against them. Then
we were labeled pro-BJP and stuff like that. Yes, I was anti-Congress.
SA: So this particular book that has come out – written by a
well known editor, says that Mr Subhash Chandra, the owner of ZEEL, is
openly pro-BJP. If I recall you were also friendly with Sanjay Gandhi,
Rajiv Gandhi and Manmohan Singh. So, how much does your voting intention
visit your newsroom?
DSC: As you have said, I have seen in the last 40
years many prime ministers and many politicians. I have more friends in
other parties than the BJP. On the other hand, I do believe and admit,
that the present prime minister, is the hope of the country and we need
to support him, and I am supporting him. I think we have supported many
other people including the Congress for 60 years. We need to give this
man a chance.
There are people out in the corporate and bureaucratic world that do
not want to change. One is used to as a politician or a business man to
the saying ‘Paisa do, kaam karao’ (This guy wants to change that). He
says I want to make a policy for you for the ease of business. After
that if you’re smarter than the rest, you’ll earn more. Earn from the
policy. What happened in the telecom scam was that a policy was made on
first-come-first-served basis. Demand drafts and bank guarantees were
made five days before the policy was announced. So tell me how could I
make a bank guarantee of Rs 2,000 crore unless I knew that this policy
was to be announced? So, such things were happening and this person
wants to change that. Again, bureaucrats don’t want to change that. I do
feel that we should support him. On the other hand, even if I say I’m
pro-BJP, aren’t the other media owners (who are) pro-Congress or
pro-Communist?
SA: We were talking about paid journalism, and I tell people
that I was born and brought up at Ramnath Goenka’s Indian Express. I
don’t hide this. So, we’ve had campaigns at times – anti-Reliance, even
mandal agitations. So, there are declared campaigns. You had a campaign
against coal block allocation. What about the undeclared campaigns?
DSC: We see this everyday in the media. And everyone gets to know about these undeclared campaigns.
SA: Since you run a business channel – people talk about
capture of businesses by stock market analysts and traders although
there is disclosure there. Then, there is Bollywood. Bollywood has fine
tuned it brilliantly. The stars come to you only when there’s a release,
otherwise they’re not available.
DSC: There’s a rate card for that too. And news
channels take money for that too. But, the money doesn’t come to the
channel. It goes to someone’s pocket. There’s a parallel rate card.
That’s why one of the media houses said it’s better to have paid news
rather than the money going to an individual’s pocket.
SA: A feeling one gets now when you watch particularly news on
TV and news in newspapers – that political parties or leaders have
become adept at gaming the media. It’s about running the TRP stories –
be it Lalit Modi, Vasundhra Raje or the recent Sheena Bora murder case –
and that perpetuates the news. Indians like spicy food, so you get the
TRP and you’re reaping revenues. Agencies don’t see what the TRP is for.
So, is that recognition there within that real issues are not getting
covered? Don’t you think that political parties are gaming the media?
DSC: Absolutely. When there is a big issue or big
controversy going to erupt, or has erupted, to make sure that doesn’t
become big they throw something else (at the media). And because of the
TRP game, the whole media runs after it.
SA: In 1992, the Harshad Mehta scam got replaced by Ayodhya,
which got replaced too. Narsimha Rao used to say that every crisis is an
opportunity to cover the last crisis...
DSC: Absolutely. That’s a game they have perfected, and we have fallen for that.
What we did was, we went directly to the viewers – we asked viewers
directly. No one had hesitation to say that the media is sold. Everyone
has said that. Then they said 'why are you putting your view in the
middle. Just give the news as it is.' Thirdly, they said that the
channels don’t look to report on the difficulties faced by the viewers
and the common man. They claimed everyone is talking only about
politics.
So, we have started taking steps towards solving this problem. This has
helped us regain our leadership position. We will make sure we report
stuff like Indrani, Lalit Modi etc. but it won’t be given that (kind of)
weightage.
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