EXHIBIT A:
Lead story in today's
Times of India that featured the photograph of a young, mentally unstable man cowering before a tiger moments before it mauled him to death. (On its website, the country's No. 1 English newspaper has helpfully provided a video link to the news item which played out on Times Now most of yesterday, proclaiming, apparently with glee: "Caught on camera: Youth mauled to death".)
The same photograph was also published on the front pages of other leading newspapers, such as
The Hindu and
The Indian Express.
Which brings me to
EXHIBIT B, a perceptive piece in
Time magazine about an unrelated event but related issue:
We Are a Camera: Life, Death and the Urge to Shoot
At tragic and mundane moments now, we reach for our cameras.
And
EXHIBIT C, a thought-provoking question on the Poynter website:
Would you snap a picture or pull the man to safety?
Why won't Indian news outlets question the value of, and ethics involved in, publishing such photographs? Because life in India is cheap.
- By the way, The Times of India is currently involved in an unsavoury tit-for-tat with Deepika Padukone. For the record, I am 100% in agreement with the views of senior journalist Prem Panicker and The Hindu's Radhika Santhanam, both of whom have launched a broadside against Bombay Times on their blogs. Why is The Times of India what it is today? This piece in the hallowed New Yorker magazine holds the clues: "Citizens Jain: Why India's newspaper industry is thriving".
UPDATE 1
This reaction came via e-mail from Commitscion
Faye D'Souza (Class of 2004):
I couldn't unsee that video. It haunts me.
I think by watching it, I felt like I was part of the group of
people who just stood there and did nothing. I remember a discussion we
had in class about the duty of press photographers in the Vietnam War,
who had to choose between taking a photograph to highlight the issue for
the world and thereby stop the war OR saving the child who was on fire.
I don't think the question is about ethics anymore. One,
these are not journalists who are looking to highlight the issue. Two,
because the all these videos were shot with the aim to entertain and
stroke the human fancy for the morbid and the macabre.
UPDATE 2
After I uploaded a link to my post this morning, Commitscion
Dipankar Paul (Class of 2009) and I had an interesting discussion on Facebook:
UPDATE 3
UPDATE 4
And here are the comments of senior journalist Bala Murali Krishna (via e-mail):
Seriously, Ramesh, do you really expect Indian media to actually think on all these sensitive issues? If you recall, even Frontline from the Hindu group was guilty of publishing gory photos of Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination. If I remember right, it was a sellout issue.