Should Journalists Protect National
Interest Or Publish And Be Damned?
Saeed Naqvi
Pakistan
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s fate hangs in the balance on unexplained
finances, most specifically for apartments he acquired on London’s most
expensive stretch, Park Lane, facing Hyde Park. I visited the most prized of
these apartments on October 15, 1999, days after Gen. Pervez Musharraf ousted
him in a coup on October 12.
To
make sense of the military handouts explaining the situation, I turned up in
London to interview his youngest son, Hasan then 23, who, I presumed would have
been in touch with members of his family in Islamabad and Lahore.
What
struck me and my camera crew were the rich, opulent interiors, heavy curtains
one would expect at the Savoy and the Dorchester, sofas with upholstery so
expensive as to hover between class and vulgarity. The deep corridors lead to
many bedrooms, one of which Hasan occupied even when he was at London
University. To elevate the grand style of the Sharifs was a butler in
attendance, wearing tails of impeccable cut, as if he were off to the Ascot
races.
My
interview with Hasan was about the coup and its aftermath, but as the 118 Park
Lane acquired saliency in the current corruption saga, I looked at the video
again from the angle of “ill-gotten wealth”. There was plenty of it in the
footage.
A
thought crossed my mind: it might be of interest to TV channels in Pakistan.
Immediately,
my hand was stayed by a left-liberal friend in the media.
“This
footage will weaken civil society which is suspicious of Imran Khan’s collusion
with the army.”
Two
schools of journalism were suddenly in conflict. Should Nawaz Sharif’s alleged
corruption be overlooked because protecting him against Imran Khan served some
higher purpose? Publish and be damned is what I had been taught when confronted
with such situations.
Another
story, ironically this one concerning Imran Khan, comes to mind.
I
had turned up in Israel, to interview Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir totally
against the advice of my left-liberal friends – Prof. Mushirul Hasan, for
instance. Muslim Congressmen surrounding Rajiv Gandhi were advising him against
upgrading relations with Israel “because the Muslim vote would be adversely
affected.” This, I wrote, was rubbish. Salman Rushdie, Shah Bano, Babari Masjid
and relations with Israel were not life and death issues for Indian Muslims.
Education, entrepreneurial help, jobs were the substantive issue. It was this
argument I had armed myself with for my journey to Jerusalem. We would be that
much more influential on the Palestinian issue I had argued.
Linda,
the Press Secretary to Shamir showed me a list of “Pakistanis who claimed to
have been sent by Imran Khan to explore relations with the Jewish state”.
Remember Jemima was married to Imran and her multi billionaire father, Sir
James Goldsmith wielded great influence in Jerusalem. I did not write that
story because Imran then was much more a cricketer than politician. Moreover,
Linda had shared this information in confidence on a personal basis.
When
Benazir Bhutto sought a conversation with Israeli President Ezer Weizman during
Nelson Mandela’s inauguration in Pretoria in 1994, I did mention the fact. She
was a Prime Minister, trying to connect with Israel clandestinely.
When
the Janata government under Morarji Desai encouraged Bhutan to open up
gradually in international affairs, south block was split on the pace of this
openness. At this juncture the successor government of Prime Minister Charan
Singh, hurriedly invited Shyam Nandan Mishra, the MP from Bihar, to attend the
Non Aligned Summit in Havana in September 1979 as the new External Affairs
Minister. A novice in world affairs, Mishra put his foot in his mouth on a
secret treaty which guides Indo-Bhutan relations.
So
cross was King Jigme Singye Wangchuk that he invited me to Mumbai where he was
halting on his journey from Havana. This was most unprecedented. No king of
Bhutan had ever given an interview to a journalist.
The
interview, published behind the back of the establishment, created a sensation.
The hawks in South Block were angry because I had provided a forum to the King
to vent his anger on a very sensitive issue which may give a handle to China.
In those days also “grazing grounds” between Bhutan and China were an issue.
Head of Bhutan’s Geological Survey, Sonam Ragbey, was in and out of New Delhi
with maps. It was all very hush, hush.
The
dilemma facing me then was: should I have anticipated the Indian hawks and,
posing as a protector of the national interest, killed the story? Or should I
abide by the old dictum: publish and be dammed?
I
took the latter route.
A
quest for balance on International Affairs in the Indian media has always been
a fool’s errand. The Imperial-colonial stranglehold obtains to this day. When
Ronald Reagan bombed Bengazi and Tripoli in April 1986 because US intelligence
had picked up chatter in a Berlin discotheque that Libyan terrorists were about
to target Western locations, the story was either not noticed in India or the
western version was wallowed hook line and sinker.
When
I turned up in Tripoli to interview Qaddafi whose six month old daughter had
been killed in the air raid on his Palace, I was regarded as a subversive,
blackleg by the western press corps. I still remember a disapproving Kate Aide
of the BBC in the hotel room opposite mine.
The
entire anti Qaddafi propaganda was based on falsehoods. Should I go along with
the powerful conventional wisdom forged globally or puncture it since I had
witnessed the incontrovertible truth?
The
interview made banner headlines in European newspapers like La Republica, but I
also lived to see how powerful the western lobbies were on that solitary event.
Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi, who had dispatched his external affairs minister, Bali
Ram Bhagat to commiserate with Qaddafi in Tripoli, came under such heavy
pressure from the Reagan White House, that he was obliged to make Bhagat the
scapegoat. He was sacked.
It
was clear as daylight once again that in situations like this, whatever the
official line, the only principle a journalist with spine must abide by is,
“publish and be damned”.
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