Journalists, editors didn’t catch on to the many conditions in the waiver and the exclusion of farm labour.
Farmers and agricultural labourers, even in a substantially agrarian state like Punjab, can be short-changed pretty easily by a bunch of spinmeisters, a cohort of lazy journalists, and, one is afraid, editors seemingly asleep on the job.
So, a farm loan waiver so partial in nature that it does not even cover the outstanding loans of those small farmers who committed suicide, becomes a “TOTAL WAIVER”, in all caps because that is how the press release issued by the CMO was headlined.
All details and nuance, or most, go missing in newsrooms, including newspaper offices which are considered more sombre than soundbite crazy television newsrooms.
As a result, not one newspaper mentioned that the entire category of agricultural labourers has been completely left out, and their loan, even if it was a measly Rs 10,000, will not be waived off, nor will any other relief be extended to them.
All farmers, who own more than 5 acres of land, have been completely left out from this loan waiver. Not even a Rs 1 lakh loan will be waived off in their case.
Much of the reporting seemed to have been left to the media advisors of the government, who drafted the press release issued by the CMO.
A number of journalists, the professionals tasked with getting the news – shorn of all lies, deceits, red herrings and prejudices – to the public seemed to have a child-like fascination for phrases they should have smelt from miles away as mere sugary confections that are of little nourishment value. Sample this: The decision was taken “…thus paving the way for eventual total waiver of agricultural debts to implement another major poll promise of the ruling party.” How difficult was it to understand that the CM was merely saying that total waiver of agricultural debts (as opposed to a waiver of crop loans of some farmers to some extent) will come, but eventually?
The CM claimed what he has done for the farmers “would provide double the relief announced by the states of Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra.” Media failed to mention that just when Amarinder Singh was speaking in the Punjab Vidhan Sabha, leaders of 35 organisations of farmers were walking out from a meeting with Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, protesting against any cut-off on loan waiver.
And newspaper journalists did not think it worth their while to recall and inform their readers of what exactly Amarinder Singh had promised in his stump speeches in the run-up to the elections.
In speech after speech, he promised his government will pay off all loans and debts that farmers and labourers had incurred from cooperative banks, national banks and aarhtiyas. “Your karza from all these three sources will be paid by us, by the Punjab government,” Amarinder Singh had said.
You can hear it in Amarinder Singh’s own words if you can bear with the shrillness in his voice that reflected his eagerness to win a poll at all costs.
“Tuhada karza jo aarhtiyan de naal hai, aseen devange,” he had repeated everywhere. Except, of course, in the Punjab Assembly yesterday, where it really mattered. (Do you really need a translation?)
Here are some simple facts related to Punjab’s loan waiver
This is what Amarinder Singh actually promised in the Assembly
For good measure, here is what Amarinder Singh did not tell the Assembly: The total amount of loan that will be waived under his scheme, or the total cost to the exchequer. But then, who is looking for the details when scribes are happy recanting press releases that say in all caps in bold letters “TOTAL WAIVER”, and television newsrooms splash 120-font breaking news: CAPTAIN NE NIBHAYA VAADA.
All that a few good men and women can do is to write a sensible news report. And stay away from all caps. Even if the Chief Minister of Punjab directly addresses the farmers, small and marginal, from the floor of the Punjab Vidhan Sabha, in English. All choices reveal a regime. And the state of journalism.
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