Nobody will dispute the perception that has been gaining ground about the credibility of Rajyotsava Awards. Nearly two hundred people were bestowed with the honour by the state government. Since the awards included the backlog of the 2008-2009 period, the list inevitably was quite long. As usual there were also last-minute additions revealing the intensity of the behind-the-scene lobbying.
Quite expectedly a plethora of achievers bagged the award for their contribution in the field of their expertise. As usual there were quite a good number of deserving candidates, but again there were also those who got the award for miscellaneous reasons, the important among these being their proximity to the corridors of power. Allegations have also emerged about the awards being sold for money. Besides, there is an obvious saffron tinge to the list, which is not totally unexpected.
But the unfazed manner in which chief minister BS Yeddyurappa has gone about appeasing media persons is something that has taken people by shock. At a time when the government is facing serious allegations of corruption and the very credibility of the dispensation is under severe attack, a record 15 people from the media fraternity have been picked for the awards. This is more than the number of awardees chosen from the field of literature, culture and sports, where the number has been capped at 10.
Yeddyurappa is not the first chief minister who has tried to keep people from the media in good humour. But his predecessors had been at least more graceful and tactful when they selected media persons for the award. They did not resort to such blatant abuse of power with an eye on bagging more air-time or print-space for the government. It would not be wrong if one is given to conclude that the chief minister has tried to ‘book’ the journalists en masse.
There is also an obvious pattern in the names of the awardees from the field of mass communication. Parameters like seniority and efficiency have all been given a go by and just one section within the media has been singled out for the honour. The only criterion that seems to have weighed in favour of these men and women is their capacity to decide the priority of the day-to-day news stories. It is not a surprise that majority among those awarded are either chief reporters of newspapers or the head of news in Kannada TV channels.
It must be noted here that there are a number of veteran journalists in the state who have just retired or on the verge of retirement and hence are ideal candidates for the award. But it would be too naïve to think that the government would invest on something which is unproductive. Why would BSY waste such a beautiful opportunity to make a wholesale purchase of journalists? Moreover, it would have been easy for him to venture into a new arena of business after the recent investments aimed at ‘strengthening’ the government.
There is no hard and fast rule that English journalists should be kept away from the Rajyotsava goodies. But it has become a convention that the awards on November 1 are given to those who have enriched Kannada culture and literature. There is no precedent of an English writer being felicitated with a Kannada Rajyotsava award. But this convention has also been flouted and the powerful English press has also been mollified. One can also ask when Madhyama Academy gives awards every year separately to recognize excellence in the field of journalism, why give them Rajyotsava award? Notably, the bunch chosen from the field of journalism this year are all young and upcoming professionals and more senior people are languishing in the obscurity of news rooms of various newspapers and channels.
The efforts of the government to placate the media can also be viewed from two perspectives. There has been a backlash against the government after the ugly political drama unfolded in the state. MLAs were sold and purchased out in the open without any shame and the values and morality hit an all-time low making a mockery of democracy. Sensing the public mood media unitedly attacked the government, though there were also a few who compromised on their professional ethics.
The thought that has gone into the selection seems to be either give the conformists their due reward or try to win the critics or at least force them to tone down their line of attack.
Given the present political situation, it would have been apt if the people in the media had decided not to accept awards as an issue of principle. Since media had also come under public scrutiny in the recent days any move that could be seen as a collusion should have been avoided by the press. We in the media keep harping about the creed "Caesar’s wife has to be above suspicion." Some of us also have taken objection to the chief justice of Karnataka High Court sharing dais with the chief minister just a day before he was to deliver a judgment on a case pertaining to the disqualification of MLAs. But as a watchdog of our democratic system, have we acquitted ourselves well?
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