Recently, the Caravan magazine brought
out an article detailing how almost 300 Madhya Pradesh based journalists cutting
across every newspaper, channels and what not, were allotted plots in Bhopal by
the Shivraj Singh Chouhan government in the early years of 2000.
The plot was not ‘gifted’
directly to each and every journalist, rather a cooperative was created that
was headed by some journalists, who had more accessibility in the government
than their fellow brothers, and later it was distributed ‘unequally’ among all the
journalists. What Caravan did not mention was that the bigger journalists got
themselves allotted more than one plot while many of them, who earn less than
Rs 25000 per month and are on their last curve of their career, did not get
even one plot. (I did not get any plot, nor I applied for).
Caravan also did not mention that
even if these poor journalists would have got the plot, they would have to again
seek government’s help to build a house on these plots. It would have been an
even bigger eye opener if Caravan or for that any media houses had done a story
on the salaries the journalists get.
Those who swear by ‘presstitutes’
and prefer painting every journalists with the same brush might not know that the salary of a journalist is barely enough
to cover his household expense and I am not referring to the fresh graduates who
are just out of college but those who have been slogging it out for 15 -20
years. The situation is worse for those who are working in Hindi newspaper.
Let me try to bring this out by
an example. A Bhopal based bureau chief of a well known Hindi newspaper who is
in his late 50s and had been in journalism for more than 20 years now was getting
a salary of Rs 53000 when I last met him in January this year. His junior colleague,
who was around 42, was getting Rs 42000. Now keep yourself in the place of these two
people and imagine the expenses that they have to incur to run their house, finance
the study of their children and eventually arrange for the expense of their
marriage.
Let me bring you to English media.
Someone like me, who is in the middle position, will be fortunate enough if his
annual package is Rs 6-7 lakhs. I have
many friends who are not getting even that. By the time I step into my 40s,
after giving 12-14 years of time into journalism, my only desire would be that
my annual salary at least reaches upto Rs 10 lakhs.
Do keep in mind that media in
India is a highly unregulated field, except two or three organizations, the
concept of basic employee welfare, like annual appraisal, good hike, yearly paid
leaves, bonuses, something that people working in other fields treat as their fundamental
rights, does not exist for journalists working in Media.
Today, the recommendation of the
7th pay commission were cleared by the cabinet and the hike that the
government employees will get is something that a journalist can only think of and sometime wish for.
There is no pay commission for
the journalists, only a holy albatross round the neck that they represent the
esteemed ‘fourth estate’ and hence are prone to more public abuse and scrutiny.
Neither the government, this one
included, nor the Maalik log are interested in increasing the salaries of journalists.
When the recommendation of the Majithia pay commission for print media were to be executed, the Maalik log, showing great solidarity, pressed the best legal mind of the country into their service to make
sure that the salaries of the ‘presstitutes’ remain abysmally low and despite
the recommendations being finally upheld by the Supreme court in 2014, it has
yet not been executed in almost 80 percent of the newspaper.
Forget the shouting and suave
anchors and presenters you have been watching on the TV. Forget the stories,
sometimes fictitious, mostly real that you read and hear about the personal wealth of these star reporters and editors.
They represent a miniscule of the journalists fraternity because the rest of the
journalists, who do not have the inclination and the guts to seek money through
other means, they pass into oblivion with a small retirement send off party and
if they are lucky enough, they can spend their remaining time in a small house
that they might have been able to build with their modest income.
No Member of parliament, no minister
and no PM has ever spoken about the abysmally low salaries the majority of
journalists get. I wish the government would make it mandatory for every
journalist to declare their income, for at least then there will be some sense
of clarity among the readers and the viewers.
No high profile journalists does a show on why Majithia is not being implemented, Ravish and Goswami alike. Maybe they are not allowed to do so by the maalik log or maybe they do not need a pay hike. When I had asked the ever active 'Justice Katju" when he was the chairman of Press council of India that why did he not push for the implementation of Majithia and what did he do in his tenure as the PCI chairman except berating the same journalists whom he was expected to support, the man did the easiest thing, he blocked me on Twitter.
So next time you use the word bikau media and presstitutes, do say a prayer for a majority of the journalists because the only thing that they are paid their whole life is a salary that swings between modest and low.
No high profile journalists does a show on why Majithia is not being implemented, Ravish and Goswami alike. Maybe they are not allowed to do so by the maalik log or maybe they do not need a pay hike. When I had asked the ever active 'Justice Katju" when he was the chairman of Press council of India that why did he not push for the implementation of Majithia and what did he do in his tenure as the PCI chairman except berating the same journalists whom he was expected to support, the man did the easiest thing, he blocked me on Twitter.
So next time you use the word bikau media and presstitutes, do say a prayer for a majority of the journalists because the only thing that they are paid their whole life is a salary that swings between modest and low.
3 comments:
Don't tell me you are in the business (yes, business) of journalism and do not know of the free lunches, dinners, booze, gifts, both in cash and kind, that most journalists get, apart from govt concessions for train travel that you get for pushing a pen on paper and that a vast majority of similarly or lower paid people doing equally or far more hard work do not. Don't tell me you do not know of the money, perks, and even property that journalists on the political beat gain around elections. Don't tell me you do not know of the money that journalists on the crime beat make. You should feed this balderdash only to people who haven't seen the business up close.
I agree with you abhinandan the profession needs reform, the work is very hard and you people make the opinion of mango people so we want deadly honest reporters and if they will get more money than they didn't ask for money from the politicians or from the government we can't leave them in this position, a serious reform is needed if we want fair reporting....
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