|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, June 24, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Features
| Previous
| Next
Media and the AIDS reality
IT is a well known fact that HIV/AIDS is a devastating virus,
that knocks the bottom out of economies, plays havoc with the
lives of those it claims - an estimated 3.86 million in India
alone. It has serious ramifications that go beyond the health
sector to include development, depredation, vulnerability and
scores of other ills. The question before the editors and senior
media people who attended National Consultation on HIV/AIDS and
the Media, jointly conducted by UNDP Regional-SSWA and the Centre
for Media Advocacy and Research, (CFAR), in New Delhi last week,
was whether the media's attempts to remove the myths and
misconceptions that cloud the disease and place it in the context
of development and peoples lives had been significant and
adequate.
The consensus among the journalists was that ethical guidelines
ought to be evolved for both reporters and copy editors and that
trained and specialist writers alone should cover the HIV beat.
Journalists could be put through an intensive training before
they write. The tone of the deliberations was set by Dr. Nirmala
Lakshman, Joint Editor of The Hindu. In her inaugural address she
spoke of the need for the media to partner the work being done by
governments and NGOs and to see whether "our preoccupation with a
different kind of journalism deters us from bringing these issues
to centrestage."
The positive groups, however, had their own experience of how the
issue should be centrestaged with sensitised and focussed
handling of the concerns of the affected, rather than just
dealing with the virus per se. Ashok Pillai, perhaps the best
known face among them, referred to a sample survey recently
conducted by the Indian Network of Positive People to stress on
the concerns of the affected: Of how the stigma and
discrimination created by exaggerated, and often outdated,
statistics, understatements and sensationalised reports resulted
in the affected shying away from the media for fear that they
would lose what little support they had if they disclosed their
status. He also spoke of how respondent after respondent had
wondered why the media rarely came to their rescue by focussing
on the positive rather than the negative aspects of HIV/AIDS.
Particularly harmful him was the use of wrong terminology,
especially when phrases like "AIDS patient" and "terminal stage"
were used for those leading full and useful lives.
The findings of the media monitoring done by the Centre for
Advocacy and Research (CFAR), however, was that while the
coverage may fall short of the expectations and needs of the
affected, there was no denying that when looked at
quantitatively, it was significant with a fair share of
compelling copy that attempted to instil a sense of immediacy,
commitment and responsibility. But while that may be so, the
monitoring also revealed a felt need for reshaping the prevailing
news gathering and reporting processes so as to enable and
encourage the kind of informed writing and perceptions that this
issue requires.
The editors were of the opinion that this was an issue that
should be reported without bias to any particular community or
way of life. Facts and details should be checked and rechecked
because any distortion, misinterpretation, breach of
confidentiality or sensationalism could result in untold harm to
the affected. Mr. D.N. Bezboruah, Editor of the Sentinel,
lamented that the charges often made against the media of "false,
inaccurate, uninformed and insensitive reporting" was in fact
valid. "There is much the media can do about the kind of
positive, correct, sensitive reporting that reflects there is
feeling behind it he said." Mr. Chandan Mitra, Editor of the
Pioneer, felt that the focus should be on individuals and "the
human dimension of the issue" and cautioned against "obfuscating
the issue by talking about larger issues like, poverty,
malnutrition and ignorance, which cannot really be resolved in
the near future, rather than the specific problem."
But, it was also repeatedly stressed that reportage cannot be
simplified to a lack of expertise, insight or perceptions. Mr.
Oindrila Mukherjee of the Statesman, spoke of how she was
convinced of the success of the innovative Sonagachi project, a
collective of commercial sex workers, but was unable to either
showcase it as an unqualified success or counter the criticism
that was being levelled against it from other quarters because of
the non-availability of any impact assessment data. Similarly,
Ms. Sathya Saran, Editor of Femina, talked of how she was keen to
target her young readership and share information on different
aspects of sexual health but was unable to do it because of the
lack of empirical data and the fact that women's groups thought
of her magazine as anti-women and one that catered only to
bimbos. Meanwhile, Ms. Kalpana Jain of The Times of India, Delhi,
while agreeing that the media did tend to sensationalise and even
exploit the traumas of the affected for the sake of good copy,
said that during extensive travels across the country, she had
found that "these traumas" were in fact a reality as was the
phenomena of AIDS victims. What is worse, many of them were not
only confronting the inevitable but were also suffering for no
fault of theirs. Even when confronted with the possibility that
they could have been infected by their partners, they seem to
accept their fates with stoic resignation.
Participants also brought up the many limitations they had to
cope with while dealing with this issue. Of deadlines that left
them no time for research or to check details and procure
informed consent, and of the rush, especially among television
channels, to be the first to flash the news which made it well
nigh impossible to maintain confidentiality. Unfortunate
misinterpretations by those translating for them, was also seen
as a problem as was the paucity of updated statistics and the
reluctance of officials and those in the know to reveal details.
Earlier, Mr. Swarup Sarkar, head of the inter-country team for
South-Asia of the Joint U.N. Programme on HIV/AIDS, (UNAIDS),
spoke of how 20 years into the epidemic, "Not many seem to
realise that this is going to be the biggest killer of the adult
population in the country over the next ten years, perhaps more
than all the wars that we had fought put together." According to
him there are pockets where the epidemic is of African
proportions - where prevalence is over two percent - a fact that
is rarely highlighted. What is worse, we know that those who have
information and choices can protect themselves from exposure and
the most vulnerable are those whose choices are limited. Yet, as
Ms. Barbara Brar of the United Nations Development Programme
pointed out, nothing was being done to "generate the conditions
in which people are empowered to protect themselves from
infection and the effected are empowered to live with dignity in
society."
The raison d'etre, Sarkar felt, was under-funding by donors,
under-spending by governments and the fact that India appears to
be unconvinced and unconcerned of the many ramifications of the
epidemic. How else could you explain the fact that though the
Prime Minister, in his Independence Day speech, had described
HIV/AIDS as one of the three most important issues confronting
the nation, no Indian leader will be present when world leaders
meet at U.N. General Assembly Special Services (UNGASS) later
this month to discuss the worst epidemic in 400 years?
SHYAMALA SHIVESHWARKAR
* * *
THE United Nations General Assembly is holding a special session
on HIV/AIDS at the highest political level between June 25 and
June 27 in New York. The special session's focus will be on
intensifying international action and to mobilise resources to
fight the epidemic. At the session, governments are expected to
adopt a Declaration of Commitment , setting targets and
timetables to fight the accelerating epidemic.
UNSecretary-General Kofi Annan and government delegations will
address various issues relating to AIDS, including incresing
resources for treatment, the importance of political leadership
to deal with the issues thrown up by the disease, preventing new
infections and access to affordable and accessible care.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Features Previous : Where BPL mobile means poor migrant Next : The world of dais | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|