Coronavirus casualties include mediapersons

India finds itself in an awkward situation as the south-Asian nation loses more than 50 working journalists to the severe health hazard, reports Nava Thakuria

As the year 2020, largely shattered by the Covid-19 pandemic, is approaching the end, India finds itself in an awkward situation as the south-Asian nation has lost over 50 working journalists to the severe health hazard.

Thousands of journalists along with other media employees got infected with the novel coronavirus as they have been playing the role of corona-warriors along with the practicing doctors, nurses, sanitation workers, police personnel etc.

The populous country witnesses 51 scribes losing their lives to Covid-19 aggravated ailments till the first week of December (around 500 global media corona-casualties) indicates callous approach of a section of editor-managements’ towards their media workers.

Most of the managements of Indian newspapers, news channels and digital news outlets are still continuing to engage their scribes to report the pandemic from the ground with little or no pre-caution and preventive measures.

“Unfortunately, the Covid-19 pandemic is claiming more and more victims in the media. It’s a huge loss. In countries like India, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico, the number of victims among journalists is on the rise,” said Blaise Lempen, general secretary of Press Emblem Campaign (www.pressemblem.ch), an international media rights body headquartered in Geneva.

Lempen, a journalist himself, added that Peru remains the country with the heaviest death toll, where 93 media workers have died of Covid-19. India is now the second worst affected country with 51 deaths. Brazil took third place with 43 victims ahead of Ecuador (41), Bangladesh (39), Mexico (33), USA (25), Pakistan (12), Panama (11), UK (10), Nigeria (8), Afghanistan, Dominican Republic & Honduras (7 each), Argentina, Nicaragua & Venezuela (6 each), Colombia, France, Russia and Spain (5), Italy (4), etc.

PEC has identified at least three corona-deaths in Nepal, Cameroon, Egypt, Guatemala, Iran, & El Salvador (3), two casualties in Algeria, Indonesia, Morocco, Paraguay, South Africa & Sweden and one death in Germany, Japan, Canada, Israel, Switzerland, Belgium, Bulgaria, Austria, Chile, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq (Kurdistan), Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Zimbabwe, etc.

India has lately lost journalist Rajiv Katara (60), who died of Covid-19 while undergoing treatment in a New Delhi hospital on 26 November. He worked for the social and literary magazine titled Kadambini from the prestigious Hindustan Times group. Hailed from Aligarh in Uttar Pradesh (UP), Katara was earlier associated with newspapers like ChouthiDuniya, SundayObserver and Dainik Jagran.

Earlier, Noida based scribe Pankaj Shukla (50) succumbed to Covid-19 complications on 20 November at JP hospital. Hailed from UP’s Bareilly locality, Shukla studied at Allahabad University and started his journalism career with popular Hindi newspapers like AmarUjala and DainikJagaran. Later he shifted to electronic platforms like Janmat TV, KhabarBharti, News 30, NewsExpress, etc. Prior to him, Haryana based journalist Rakesh Taneja (51), who used to work for Zee News, AmarUjala, DainikBhaskar etc, died of Covid-19 at a Faridabad hospital on 16 November. Orissa’s television scribe Prabir Kumar Pradhan (35), who was associated with News18 (Odia) news channel succumbed to the virus infection on 5 November.

A video journalist from Tripura in northeast India, Jitendra Debbarma (46) lost his battle against the corona infection on October 20. Debbarma worked for a local Kakborok language cable channel named Chini Khorang and succumbed to Covid-19 complications. Mysuru (Karnataka) based journalist Pavan Hettur (35), who worked for Kannada daily Prajavani died of the virus infection on 18 October at a private hospital.

Patna (Bihar) based photojournalist Krishna Mohan Sharma (63), who worked for TimesofIndia, died of corona complications on October 15 while undergoing treatment at AIIMS, New Delhi. Same day, veteran cricket journalist & commentator Kishore Bhimani (81), died after contracting the virus at a hospital in Kolkata of Pachim Bangla.

In September itself, India lost twelve journalists to Covid-19 as Ludhiana based journalist Ashwani Kapoor (70), who worked for highly circulated newspaper Punjab Kesari, succumbed to Covid-19 at a private hospital on 29th day. Assam’s Guwahati based news presenter in AllIndiaRadio, Golap Saikia (52) died with corona-infections on September 26 at a city-based private hospital.

Patna’s journalist Arun Kumar Verma (68), who was associated with various Prasar Bharti outlets died during Covid-19 treatment on 22 September. Indore (Madhya Pradesh) journalist Manoj Binwal (55), who was associated with Hindi newspaper Prajatantra, died of the virus infection while undergoing treatment on 20 September. A day back, UP’s Agra based journalist Ami Adhar Nidar (50), who worked for DainikJagaran, passed away with the infection.

Jammu (J & K) based scribe Anil Srivastava (68), who was associated with United News of India, succumbed to Covid-19 on 18 September at a government run hospital. Same day MP’s Jabalpur’s journalist Harish Choubey (60), who worked for Dainik Bhaskar, expired with the coronavirus infection. Aurangabad (Maharashtra) based journalist Rahul Dolare (49) died on 14 September at a government hospital. Same day, Tamil Nadu’s popular journalist-actor Florent C Pereira (67) died of Covid-19.

Punjab’s Abohar based journalist  Naresh Bajaj (57), who was associated with SachKahoon newspaper, succumbed to corona-complications on 10 September. Ravinder Kumar (30) from Himachal Pradesh, who worked for Dainik Jagran, died of Covid-19 on September 9. Assam’s rural reporter Dhaneswar Rabha (35) died at Guwahati medical college hospital on 6 September. Next day, another Assam based journalist Ashim Dutta (65) passed away with the infection at Silchar medical college hospital.

Months back, Dhanbad’s journalist Sanjiv Sinha, Gorakhpur’s photo journalist Rajiv Ketan, Mumbai’s senior film-journalist Shyam Sarma, Nellore’s scribe  Narayanam Seshacharyulu, Pune’s television reporter Pandurang Raikar, Kanpur’s television journalist Neelanshu Shukla, Patiala’s photo journalist  Jai Deep, Tirupati’s television reporter Madhusudan Reddy and video journalist M Parthasarathy succumbed to the virus infections.

The list also includes senior journalist Prakash Deshmukh from Mumbai, veteran journalist Ashok Churi from Palghar, television reporter Ramanathan & news videographer E Velmurugan from Chennai, news presenter Davinder Pal Singh from Chandigarh, television scribe Manoj Kumar from Hydera- bad, print-journalist Pankaj Kulashrestha from Agra, Orissa’s journalists  Simanchal Panda, K Ch Ratnam and Priyadarshi Patnaik. Kolkata’s photojournalist Ronny Roy became the first scribe in India to lose his battle against the virus infection.

Need not to mention that with casualties, the pandemic also crushed the mainstream Indian media industry to a large extent. Many print media owners have stopped publishing physical newspapers and shifted to the digital space. Some owners even closed down their editions in different localities, reduced the number of pages, cut salaries and even layoff employees citing the shrinkage of advertisement revenues since the pandemic hit the country.

letters@tehelka.com