The second headline was “Mumbai woman worth Rs30 crore dies of neglect, high court lambasts state”.
The story was about how “an angry Bombay High Court pulled up the state after hearing how a 68-year-old woman died of neglect despite owning property estimated at Rs30 crore off Yari Road in Versova”. This is a suburb of the city where many of the wealthy live.
“The court said it was unfortunate that neither her family nor the state took care of her though a law for the welfare of senior citizens mandates medical support and old-age homes. Other senior citizens should not face a similar fate, it said, adding it wishes to examine the scope and ambit of the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007”.
The lawyer representing the woman said that “for five years, she was in such a wretched condition. The same fate must not be suffered by others,” adding that under a new law, “anyone neglecting a senior citizen which ultimately leads to unfortunate consequences is not entitled to the person’s property”. However, the court noted that from the woman’s post-mortem report, “it appeared that she died of natural causes”.
As the headline announces, what seemed to have been most offensive in the story was the fact that a wealthy woman should have suffered in this fashion. In a nation where, as Gandhi’s piece makes clear, millions struggle to survive, the media attention is focused on the wealthy individual. To some extent, this is a global thing and the idea of covering celebrities is accepted as proper practice and their lives are more worthy of coverage. However, in India, this is extended to the wealthy and even the middle class, often to the exclusion of the large mass of population. India has one of the highest accident rates in the world, but often the stories selected will be headlined ‘BMW accident’, because a fancy car deserves more coverage. This is taken to disturbing levels as those familiar with our newspapers will verify.
A second example of this is the employee of the big corporate firm, usually the software firms, which do not have much advertising clout. Infosys, the Bengaluru firm, has more than 100,000 employees, and incidence of suicide or rape or violence or theft is as likely in such a large set as in the general population. However, the media will inevitably use the name of the firm in its headline and on searching the internet for the words “Infosys employee suicide” and “Wipro employee suicide”, this will become obvious. The media may argue that this fact of their corporate employment is interesting but try searching for “Reliance employee suicide” and it is apparent that the treatment is reserved for some. Either Reliance employees do not commit suicide, or that when they do, the media backs off from associating the company with the act, though it is enthusiastic about doing this for Infosys and Wipro. Why? Because Reliance is a big advertiser and has much more clout than the software firms, which have no use of advertising in Indian papers and television stations.
I am not saying that the media should begin associating the doings of Reliance employees with their company, but that they are wrong in doing it for the software firms. The same problem of selective reporting is to be found in other coverage. There are about 25,000 rapes in India annually (which is actually quite low compared with other countries, including Western countries), but of these the media will pick those victims whom it sees as more important. The story of rape in a taxi service for the upper class will get disproportionate, and in fact, obscene amounts of coverage over a similar crime elsewhere in the same city. The media constantly taps into the middle class Indian sentiment that the poor are not important enough to be covered, because their lives (“nasty, brutish and short” in the words of Thomas Hobbes) are not important.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 18th, 2015.
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COMMENTS (21)
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@Motiwala - Every developing country has a middle class, lower class and higher class. Your country is an exception, on the path down to Somalia, hence you're probably unaware of these.
@Sarita Talwai: Very well put Sarita.
And I will add one point - it was only when the middle class acquired critical mass in democracies like the US or the UK that they prospered, that politics became more responsible, not rabble rousing.
India is also on its way, and that is bad news for people who treat the poor like a captive vote bank.
Second attempt : I feel this applies to the global media industry and it is subject to human values and humans are fickle.
@Milind: How many classes are there? Upper high class? Lower medium upper class? Flat lowest class? Upper medium low class. Flat out on the pavement class? This is what happens when the Bharatis ape their British colonial masters. Plus 1400 years of inferiority complex.
Ironic!! Aakar Patel accusing others of bias??
Aakar patel completely misses the point.
Most papers cater to a particular sections of the people and highlight news that are of relevance to them. A movie magazine won't talk about politics, a political magazine won't talk about sports.
Similarly, a english magazine that caters largely to middle class and upper class will cover the issues of the poor less. Go to vernacular media, and you'll see far more articles about the troubles of farmers, support price, their strife, advice for them etc.
Aakar is guilty of the "selective reading" just as he accuses the papers of "selective writing"!!
Mr. Author you self only write in English media. Btw india has media houses in each state with regional languages.so they are reporting day to day most of the reports that are happening in that particular state.So you are saying if the english media do not pick up a news for reporting means that is selective.oh common.do some truth finding before writing a article on this.
@Gopeet:
I'm glad you take so much interest in me.
ET, where is my second comment?
The irony is that mr Aakar patel only reads english media and also write only in english. Still he has so much sympathy with people from lower strata, how touching.
@wb: 'water bottle' rest of us are shocked you agree with someone.!! 'wholeheartedly agree as it aligns with my own' Thank you Lords! Thank you! Thank you Rama, Vishnu, Lakshmi, Shiva, Brahma, Parvati, Ganesh, Shesha. Thank you all gods and their avatars. thanks so much
As usual the author has picked up some obscure news which has been overlooked by most news agencies and built a story around it. The Indian middle class is largely English reading and hence news of its interest is printed in the English newspapers or discussed on EnglishT.V.channels. The regional newspapers and T.V channels cater to people from every strata, rich, middle class, lower middle class everyone. If we read about an accident of a Wipro employee, we want to know more because Wipro is a household name. We all know or know of someone working there. It is human nature to show interest in something you can identify with. The growing middle class is often tagged as selfish and accused of living in a bubble. It is this very middle class that lubricates the economy, pays taxes, volunteers on weekends, is ambitious for its children and employs and nurtures maids and cooks and drivers and nannies. Please do not see dark clouds hovering over India all the time. Rome was not built in a day. We are getting there. With or without your expert advice.
Now that Aakar Patel and his folks are at the receiving end they're crying foul... Now the shoe is on the other foot... For years, under bogus secularism you guys selectively downplayed any atrocities by the minorities while overplaying those from the majority community, tried creating false equivalences...
Having said that, I would agree with your article... The moral compass of India is determined by the middle class.. Atrocities on the lower middle class or poor are brushed aside as these do not induce the same emotions amongst us.
@wb: "..I WILL BE surprised you noticed it today, not ten years ago" Huh? Say again? What does that mean? Does it signifies English remedial classes? Could be it just occurred in the author's stream of consciousness recently. Something triggered it. Therefore it resulted in this article. As some future incident or article or Modi's malfeasance might engineer a response from the author......Karma....
Why do I get the feeling that Aakar Patel has cherry-picked certain incidents as he usually does in order to corroborate some far flung hypothesis? I certainly wan't aware of the 68-year old woman dying from neglect and I doubt it made any ripples in the national media, let alone the vernacular media. However nothing can disguise the fact that the national English media is held by contempt by most Indians and the same goes for the multitude of 24X7 news channels whose credibility has plumbed new lows.
The author is unaware of the fact that the vernacular media in India is much more widely read than the English media. Dainik Jagran with its daily readership of over 15 million trumps Times of India that has slightly more than 7 million readers. Even a newspaper like Malayala Manorama has a daily readership of 8.5 million even though it is mostly restricted to Kerala.
Thirdly, the upper middle class represents an aspirational group for most Indians. Most Indians want to join an Infosys or Wipro rather than a Reliance or Adani. The former represents a white collar job paying a 7-figure salary thereby making it easier to afford a car and a house while the latter represents a blue collar job that may not pay as much.
It is high time for Pakistan to bestow Aakar Patel with Pakistani citizenship as a reward for his non-stop bickering on minor points in India in Pakistani newspapers. By the way, nobody reads him in India. He may decline the 'honour' because he is 100 times safer in Mumbai!
Don't worry media on this side of the border is doing the same.Corporate interests first!
I wholeheartedly agree with this opinion as it aligns with my own.
The middle-class (the ever eager consumer of the ever expanding rubbish that our ever greedy corporate is ever willing to sell) is in the middle of the attention even though they make up only 300 million.
More than 700-800 million lower-middle class and poor people of this country are equivalent to animals.
However, this is not a thing of today and I'll be surprised why you noticed it today and not ten years ago.
I fail to understand why the media/bureaucrats/politicians have failed our farmers and very small time businessmen like street hawkers so miserably.
Modi when came to power said that it is the poor and the weak that need governance and not the rich.
But today he acts like he is the PM of the state of Gujarat and not even of the entire country.
To be more specific, Modi acts as if he is the PM of a few Adanis and Ambanis and the rest of the 1.2 billion people do not matter.
IIndeed media across the world does selective reporting unfortunately. You too have been guilty of this by the emphasis on one riot and not others prior to that which were much bigger and lasted much longer. Even the coverage of riot was selective - just the occurence while not talking about what led to the riot and what was done to control it and hold accountable those responsible for it. Typically the fact that people from both communities were killed is also not mentioned because it does not suit the theory that they were against just one community.
As you can expect, another stellar article brandishing, elaborating and illuminating the dark recesses of the Bharati psyche..er..corporate mind. Comparing a corporation to the average Bharati on the sidewalk is simple. After all, these entities do represent the buyers toxic mindset. Since it was unilaterally declared and accepted that Corporations are People. Aping the US, in all things pertinent comes naturally to the Bharatis. And Bharat clearly demonstrate that nothing is original there. It is a copy, either from the Muslim rule, or from another nation. Even Nepal or Bhutan could give originality lessons to the Bollywoodistan.
Poor and disoriented !!! Mr. Aakar may I dare to ask you as to why you are not active in India?