“GOOSEBUMPS! Have you ever seen a journalist showing so much spine and courage before going to jail?”
Exposing misgovernance is risky for reporters in #UttarPradesh. This March, in the town of Ballia, some staked their freedom and did so anyway. scroll.in/a/1026629
#CommonGround: Digvijay Singh, a reporter for the Hindi daily Amar Ujala, along with two other journalists, had been arrested on charges of being complicit in the leaks of question papers for Class 10th and 12th board exams.
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In UP, those who uncover stories of misgovernance risk retaliation from displeased authorities.
And yet some, like Digvijay Singh and his colleagues, persevere, despite receiving negligible financial support from the publications that print their stories. scroll.in/a/1026629
This week on #CommonGround, @psychia90 reports on the unique pressure-cooker environment of small-town journalism in India.
They not only lack the institutional support, but also, in most cases, don’t even earn a living wage. scroll.in/a/1026629
In March, a video of journalist Digvijay Singh went viral online. In it, he is seen surrounded by policemen, calling the DM of Ballia a thief, and the superintendent of police a thug. scroll.in/a/1026629
Singh, along with two other journalists, has been arrested.
UP: Manoj Gupta, who works for the daily Rashtriya Sahara, played a key role in procuring the leaked answer sheets, and the Sanskrit question paper and answer key that were published in March. scroll.in/a/1026629
He was later arrested by the UP police in Nagra.
Journalists,who had been crucial to publishing stories, and bringing exam paper leaks to the public eye, were arrested.
This wasn’t unusual – district authorities in UP had in the past, too, targeted those who had exposed the massive problem of the leaks. scroll.in/a/1026629
On March 29, as he finalised the story about the Sanskrit paper leak, Saurobh Singh, who heads Amar Ujala's Ballia bureau, received a leaked copy of English question paper, for an exam to be held the next day.
#CommonGround: Out in print, the rumour about the exam paper leaks was no longer a rumour.
There was reason to be cautious – authorities in UP's Ballia region were known to turn against reporters who wrote about such leaks. scroll.in/a/1026629
"You didn’t inform me, in writing or orally"
After the publication of the exam paper leaks story, the DM phoned Ajit Ojha, demanding that he send him the leaked material. Soon after, police arrested Ojha, accusing him of involvement in the leaks. scroll.in/a/1026629
Ojha told the DM he was apprehensive about sharing the leaked question paper with him because reporters had been in trouble in the past after sending such material to authorities.
Then there was a subtle threat after which the reporter finally gave in. scroll.in/a/1026629
"The incessant calls from the police, the DIOS, it looked like they were going to implicate me," Ajit Ojha told @psychia90
He said he felt “like a terrorist” as the police allegedly mishandled him when arrived at the Amar Ujala office to arrest him. scroll.in/a/1026629
#CommonGround | After the stories about the English exam paper leak, and alleged Sanskrit paper leak, were published, police descended on Amar Ujala's Ballia office to arrest Ojha. He claims they were violent, and manhandled him. scroll.in/a/1026629
#CommonGround | Under the late Kalyan Singh's chief ministership, Uttar Pradesh enacted a stringent law against cheating that is believed to a key reason for the BJP's defeat in the 1993 state elections.
#CommonGround | The Amar Ujala stories about the leaked Sanskrit and English question papers. While authorities denied the leaked Sanskrit paper was the one that was used, they cancelled the English exam in 24 districts.
#DroupadiMurmu as President would be a triumph for the Sangh Parivar – but not the Adivasi community
By nominating Murmu as its presidential candidate,the Sangh has completed its last leg of appropriating all of India’s major identities By Vivek Deshpande scroll.in/a/1026797
#PresidentialElections2022 | Should the nomination of a presidential nominee be beholden to considerations of caste, creed, tribe or even academic achievement? By Vivek Deshpande scroll.in/a/1026797
Wouldn’t this be to reduce the highest constitutional post in the country to a mere symbol? Yet, time and again, this is exactly what has happened under successive governments. By Vivek Deshpande
Nine years after Muzaffarnagar riots, the only woman who pursued rape charges still awaits justice
She stood her ground even as the other rape complainants withdrew their cases. Nearly a decade later, is a verdict anywhere in sight? @iyersaishwarya writes scroll.in/a/1026696
In 2013, as communal riots spread across Muzaffarnagar in western UP, she had been beaten up and raped. Her son, then three months old, had been held hostage.
The 34-year-old said she knew the three men who had raped her – they lived in her village and were frequent customers of her husband, a tailor. scroll.in/a/1026696
She was scared and dizzy with fever on Feb 18, the day she had to go to the Muzaffarnagar district court.
#MaharashtraPoliticalTurmoil | The rebel MLAs are demanding that the Shiv Sena should quit the ruling alliance formed with the Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party.
#MaharashtraPoliticalCrisis | 37 rebel Shiv Sena MLAs who are currently camping at a hotel in Guwahati on Thursday write to Maharashtra Dy Speaker Narhari Zirwal, proclaiming state minister Eknath Shinde as their leader in the legislature.
Tuesday saw a repeat of a now-familiar sight in Indian politics: MLAs being herded to a secure holiday resort to prepare the ground for a government to be brought down. By @ShoaibDaniyal ✍️
#DataCheck: While there is no specific law that defines hate speech, there are select legal provisions or sections in the Indian Penal Code that prohibit certain forms of speech with the exception to free speech.
#DataCheck: Cases filed under this section registered a sixfold or almost 500% increase in seven years – 323 cases in 2014 to 1,804 cases in 2020 – according to the National Crime Records Bureau.
Congresswoman Ilhan Omar introduces a resolution about ‘worsening treatment’ of minorities in India
She urged the US Secretary of State to designate India as a ‘country of particular concern’ because of its human rights record. scroll.in/a/1026772
Omar, one of the first Muslim women elected to Congress, expressed “grave concern about the worsening treatment of religious minorities in India”. scroll.in/a/1026772
The resolution by the congresswoman noted that the US Commission on International Religious Freedom has also recommended to the Joe Biden government that it designate India as a “country of particular concern” for three consecutive years. scroll.in/a/1026772