In February last year, nineteen year old Nido Tanya of Arunachal Pradesh was brutally attacked in Delhi. The attack took place in a busy market in broad daylight. Nido later succumbed to his injuries. This hate crime too was covered extensively by the media. It prompted the government to create stringent laws against all forms of racism.
Though hate crimes have been aplenty, people from the northeast have constantly borne the brunt. Creating a more inclusive society, wherein every Indian feels safe in any part of the country, requires a massive effort. Making laws is just one part of it, but what takes this effort much further is awareness. The news media is a key element in creating such awareness, one of the reasons it is known as the fourth estate. Unfortunately on this front too, they have put their well-known hypocrisy on display. Yes, they have covered racial attacks against people from the north east extensively. But what about covering something other than what grabs eyeballs? What about covering the on-goings on the ground in the northeast? What about covering these states with the same intensity as they cover the rest of India?
These are just two big issues the mainstream media has chosen to avoid. If one follows local news portals of the northeast, one would be surprised by the sheer amount of content that never makes it to the national media. Did you know that the Mizoram government has imposed a traditional dress-code on its female employees? We didn’t see the usual mainstream hue and cry over decisions of this nature! Do you know that Tripura is close to achieving a hundred percent literacy? The mainstream missed out on such an inspirational story! What many don’t realise is that each of the states has its own political class and complicated social equations. Each region holds very unique issues close to their hearts. But due to systematic omission and apathetic disregard, hardly any of these issues make it to the mainstream discourse. The media unfortunately, has itself become party to the discrimination against the northeast.
Pretending like these states don’t exist is highly irresponsible behaviour from the mainstream media. Yes, media houses are not non-governmental organisations. Yes, they have a business to run and it comes down to TRPs at the end of the day. Yes, they have their political prejudices and seek a favourable regime. But all media houses blatantly blacking out an entire section of the country is anti-national to say the least. If they seek to arrest their swift decline, they better get their act together.