The skies are darkening for media across the world. In India, the courts have affirmed a multimillion dollar award of damages to a former judge because a news channel inadvertently showed his photograph for a short while before realising and reversing the error. In the United States, Gawker, a popular website, was chased out of business because of punitive damages in a single case of defamation. Given the opacity of several processes of government, getting access to complete recorded details of an investigation is at best difficult and usually impossible. Should a culture of Zero Tolerance to errors made by the media get set in stone, the effect on not simply press freedom, but freedom of speech will be affected, to the detriment of democracy. In such a context, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s comments that regulation of the media should be an in-house matter is welcome, as several within his party have expressed a contrary view, openly excoriating the media in terms that are less than complimentary. Of course, the tide of history is protecting the media from becoming extinguished. Even in the case of Charlie Hebdo, the satirical magazine published from Paris, a dastardly attack by crazed fanatics, which resulted in several deaths among the editorial staff could not silence the magazine, whose next issue soon appeared on newsstands. However, it is not merely terrorists seeking to end press freedom, but even some governments ironically elected into office via the popular vote. In this dismal list, the Turkey of Recip Tayyip Erdogan has the prime slot.
As many as 46 journalists have been killed in the line of duty during the period since the 1990s, none in a conventional war zone, but all within the country while they were engaged in their duties. Several dozen are now in jail, leading to a country that was once a model of moderation being