A week soaked in blood and gore

With deaths being reduced to media headlines, the detachment it has brought about is chilling. Crying over them does not even come as an afterthought and it has become easier to move-on

bikram

Bikram Vohra | September 23, 2013



This week the sun went down and the night came riding in. The world went crazy. Madmen attacked a US naval base in the capital. Terrorists from Somalia mowed down nearly 70 people in a Nairobi mall even as crack troops prepared to launch an attack, thankfully keeping the damn TV cameras away from the scene unlike in Mumbai where the utter stupidity of the authorities allowed a television invasion and real time information to the 26/11 killers inside the hotels.

Every move of the Mumbai rescue operation was transmitted in colour because the system allowed for the trivialisation of bloodbaths into entertainment. The Kenyans and the world learnt the lesson of keeping cameras away and have said so… God forbid but if India ever has a crisis again, it will keep talking baboons, both political and media, off the lenses.

How much less mayhem there might have been if that horrible terrifying madness in Mumbai had not been a TV channel competition? Ironically, it never even became an issue and no investigation was ever carried out or warnings issued against aiding and abetting the enemy. India did not even conduct an inquiry into that aspect and now we have the Kenyan president rightly using the absurdity as a caution to the world. No, we will not have you covering the response. There was not even a public interest litigation on why military commanders were sharing intelligence inputs with hostage takers. If India faces the truth about Mumbai one day she will learn that these channels contributed directly to the deaths in the hotels.

Then, in Pakistan, violence took a new heave with 77 persons blown up by suicide bombers and a car blast while they were praying in a landmark church and it has never happened before. Just because it is a regular feature and our synapses are short circuited does not mean the pain is any less for the 90 others killed at a funeral in Baghdad, victims of a series of blasts as they gathered to say goodbye to a tribal chief. And Syria is up for grabs as the world seeks the harbour of rhetoric.

As if all this man-made massacre was not enough, nature in her obvious disgust for the human race, decided to create two major storms in the US and the Philippines and render thousands homeless and huge tracts of land destroyed.

The tears we have cried could have filled an ocean, now we read these headlines with chilling and dry-eyed detachment. After all, shooting little kids in a mall is part of life, right? Destroying the living as they say farewell to the dead is part of life, right? Wiping out scores as they bow in prayer is a part of life, right?

This is the legacy we are giving our children…right we are.

Comments

 

Other News

Elections 2024: 1,351 candidates in fray for Phase 3

As many as 1,351 candidates from 12 states /UTs are contesting elections in Phase 3 of Lok Sabha Elections 2024. The number includes eight contesting candidates for the adjourned poll in 29-Betul (ST) PC of Madhya Pradesh. Additionally, one candidate from Surat PC in Gujarat has been elected unopp

2023-24 net direct tax collections exceed budget estimates by 7.40%

The provisional figures of direct tax collections for the financial year 2023-24 show that net collections are at Rs. 19.58 lakh crore, 17.70% more than Rs. 16.64 lakh crore in 2022-23. The Budget Estimates (BE) for Direct Tax revenue in the Union Budget for FY 2023-24 were fixed at Rs. 18.

‘World’s biggest festival of democracy’ begins

The much-awaited General Elections of 2024, billed as the world’s biggest festival of democracy, began on Friday with Phase 1 of polling in 102 Parliamentary Constituencies (the highest among all seven phases) in 21 States/ UTs and 92 Assembly Constituencies in the State Assembly Elections in Arunach

A sustainability warrior’s heartfelt stories of life’s fleeting moments

Fit In, Stand Out, Walk: Stories from a Pushed Away Hill By Shailini Sheth Amin Notion Press, Rs 399

What EU’s AI Act means for the world

The recent European Union (EU) policy on artificial intelligence (AI) will be a game-changer and likely to become the de-facto standard not only for the conduct of businesses but also for the way consumers think about AI tools. Governments across the globe have been grappling with the rapid rise of AI tool

Indian Railways celebrates 171 years of its pioneering journey

The Indian Railways is celebrating 171 glorious years of its existence. Going back in time, the first train in India (and Asia) ran between Mumbai and Thane on April 16, 1853. It was flagged off from Boribunder (where CSMT stands today). As the years passed, the Great Indian Peninsula Railway which ran the

Visionary Talk: Amitabh Gupta, Pune Police Commissioner with Kailashnath Adhikari, MD, Governance Now


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter