|
June
28, 2001
|
|
Emergency:
Recalling the night of the long knives in June 1975
|
How
the media learned to love the Emergency
The
press in India came under censorship today for the first time since
Independence...
SO
ran a small report in The Indian Express of June 27, 1975.
How did a supposedly mighty institution, which had even on occasion
defied the gag orders of the British Raj, do that almost Titanic
nosedive? This is an anniversary question, of course, one that pops
up with unfailing regularity every last week of June. But somehow
there’s never been a convincing answer to it, even as history has
moved on and a new generation of editors has replaced the pilots
of the front pages in those tenuous times.
There
were three distinct phases in this gag exercise: the initial crackdown,
administration of the silence and its long term management. The
coup began with the electricity supply to the newspapers of the
Capital being cut off — a decision that was taken late on June 25,
1975, a moment which has come to be known as the night of the long
knives. The idea of cutting off electricity, according to Katherine
Frank in her biography on Indira Gandhi, was masterminded by Sanjay
Gandhi and R.K. Dhawan. Frank believes while Indira endorsed censorship,
she let her son and personal secretary impose it.
Siddhartha
Shankar Ray, the then chief minister of West Bengal, who lent his
formidable legal acumen to the operation, was around that night.
But even he was shocked when he learnt about the electricity plan.
Ray is believed to have protested to the then minister of state
for home Om Mehta, ‘‘This is absurd. This is not what we discussed.
This is not on.’’ He is then believed to have demanded to talk to
Indira who had retired for the night. Ray, or so he told Frank,
believed the prime minister was ‘‘shocked’’ when she heard about
the plan. She asked Ray to wait and went to consult Sanjay, who
then apparently rang up Bansi Lal in Haryana and told him about
Ray’s objections. Bansi Lal’s response was, ‘‘Throw him out, he
is spoiling the game. He thinks too much of himself as a lawyer
although he knows next to nothing.’’
Indira
then seems to have fallen in line, although she told Ray,‘‘It’s
alright; there will be electricity.’’ The power was cut and most
of Delhi’s newspapers did not appear that day. Frank states that
only The Statesman and The Hindustan Times appeared
that day, while Raj Thapar in her memoirs, All These Years, puts
it this way: ‘‘We burned away without electricity that first morning,
except for one hour in which The Hindustan Times and Motherland
rushed to print a few sheets which were confiscated by the police.’’
Indira
Gandhi’s address to the nation over All India Radio on the morning
of June 26 began with the now legendary observation, ‘‘There is
nothing to panic about’’. She revealed the press had to be restrained
because of its ‘‘irresponsible writing’’ in a period of grave disturbances.
‘‘The purpose of censorship is to restore a climate of trust,’’
she said. Most newspapers very quickly learnt that lesson in trust.
The
next phase — the managing of silence — required the services of
that spineless tribe known as the babu in the backroom. It was his
job to ensure the Defence of India rules were observed to the last
letter. Under the rules, ‘‘All printers, publishers and editors
of newspapers, periodicals, pamphlets and other documents,’’ should
submit for scrutiny all material before it appears in the public
domain. The PIB even issued guidelines which stated that there was
an overwhelming need in this situation of national emergency for
‘‘extreme caution and circumspection in the handling and surveying
of news and comments. The press required to be advised to guard
against publication of unauthorised, irresponsible or demoralising
news items, conjectures and rumours.’’
Friendly
notes from the censor landed on the tables of editors: ‘‘Censor
says that news items relating to Pakistani embassy functions in
Delhi today at which the president is being invited have to be played
in low key’’. Or: ‘‘You would appreciate that with the widespread
monsoons in the country after a distressing lull for about a month,
there is no need to apprehend continued price rise. I shall be grateful
if you would extend ready co-operation in the endeavour of government
to sustain the confidence of the consumer.’’
Though
the media soon fell in line — with the exception of a flourishing
underground press — the government was paranoid enough to promulgate
three executive ordinances in December 1975 in the wake of the high
courts of Bombay and Gujarat striking down censor orders. They gave
authorities special powers to ban the public of ‘‘objectionable
material’’ and provided ‘‘for action against publications which
are likely to excite disaffection against the constitutionally established
Government, incite interference with production, supply or distribution
of essential commodities or services, create disharmony among different
sections of society and promote indecent, scurrilous or obscene
writing.’’
It
may be useful to read the Far Eastern Economic Review of
February 20, 1976, where its India correspondent Lawrence Lifschultz
described how he was told to leave the country at a week’s notice.
He had wondered aloud whether a report he had just written on The
Indian Express had anything to do it.
Lifschultz’s
report, entitled ‘Rolling the presses Indira’s way’, in the issue
dated January 16, ‘76, described the attempt of the authorities
of the day to take over and eliminate the Indian Express
group of newspapers. Lifschultz reported how ‘‘the ‘agent’ chosen
for this task’’ was none other than K.K. Birla, proprietor of the
The Hindustan Times. ‘‘The affair began in late July, one
month after the Emergency was declared. The Goenka family was approached
by Rajni Patel, who is now a Congress party leader in Bombay and
a close confidant of Mrs Gandhi. Patel reportedly informed the Goenkas
that some members of their family would soon be arrested under MISA
because of the Indian Express group’s pre-Emergency attitudes.’’
On
August 30, B.D. Goenka was called to Bombay by Rajni Patel, where
he met D.K. Barooah, Congress party president and V.C. Shukla, the
new minister for information. He was told that running the newspaper
would be made impossible by IT authorities and the government, unless
the Goenkas agreed to part with the newspapers.
‘‘In
September and October that year, K.K. Birla entered the negotiations,
according to Lifschultz: ‘‘The government at this stage appears
to have changed its position from staging an outright takeover of
the newspaper, it shifted to a less expensive but equally effective
ploy — gaining total control of the board of directors’’. The Goenkas
were asked to sack S. Mulgaonkar, editor-in-chief of the Indian
Express group and Kuldip Nayar, the paper’s editor, who was
arrested in July until the High Court had ordered his release.
By
mid-December, Lifschultz reported, ‘‘after four months of ‘negotiations’’,
a compromise was reached. The Goenkas lost control of the Indian
Express, but was granted the right to reject certain board nominees
whom he found absolutely unacceptable due to their ‘irregular’ political
reputations. The final solution allowed him five loyal board members
against six selected by Information Minister V.C. Shukla.’’ Lifschultz
saw this ‘‘backroom takeover’’ as the ‘‘first direct intervention
by the ruling party in the management and political direction of
a major Indian daily’’. He sought an interview with Shukla on his
version on this issue. That just about cooked his goose: his marching
orders came soon after.
Many
of the events of the emergency are now forgotten, or live on only
in private narrations. But they are as relevant today as ever, because
the shadow of the wielders of power, ever impatient about any scrutiny
of their actions, and the babus in the backroom, ever willing to
oblige the former lot, continues to fall on the media and the citizen.
It’s important then to remember a time when, says Raj Thapar, ‘‘it
seemed as if everyone had left his voice at home under his bed or
where it was impossible to find.’’
|