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

What the US–Iran peace deal means for India

After months of rising tensions, the United States and Iran have reached a memorandum of understanding called the "Islamabad Agreement." This agreement allows for the immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz without tolls and provides Iran with relief from sanctions, depending on its complianc

V. M. Tarkunde: A legal luminary par excellence

14 Lawyers: Portraits from The Bar By Raju Ramachandran  Juggernaut, 248 pages, Rs. 799  

The Cost of Obesity

The latest episode of Checks and Balances focuses on the ticking time bomb of obesity in India, and Geetanjali Minhas of Governance Now spoke with a panel of experts. You can watch the episode here: https://youtu.be/mH

US-Iran deal: Path to peace or prelude to deeper regional quagmire?

In the midst of deep mistrust, the US and Iran are reported to have reached a framework deal for ending the West Asian conflict. But whether it will result in any meaningful breakthrough or pave the way for any lasting peace in the region, is in the realm of speculation.   During

Lived life, philosophy, spirituality and other enigmas

The Ashes Are Warm: Memories of a Lifetime Spent with UG Krishnamurti By Mahesh Bhatt and Sunita Pant Bansal Rupa Publications, 384 pages, Rs 495  

In Varanasi, fringe expansion vs. core heritage

For centuries, the urban framework of Varanasi was defined not just by its relationship with the sacred Ganga but by its multifaceted network of urban commons. Historic kunds, seasonal talabs (ponds), and open maidans served as the city’s basic ecological infrastructure. Th





Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter