Integrity Score 160
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One day in 2002, when I was a cub reporter with the newspaper Greater Kashmir, I was discussing a story idea with a senior editor when a man walked into the newsroom and called my name. I asked him to sit down and inquired about the purpose of his visit, mistaking him for one of those people who would often walk into the newspaper’s office with a grievance they desperately wanted to get into print. But he said he was a sub-inspector with the crime investigation department and had to ask me a few questions. “Routine work,” he assured me, speaking in Kashmiri and Urdu. He then proceeded to ask me about my parents, my address, and my favourite books and authors.
Then, the polite policeman asked me something with such frankness that I felt both amused and repulsed. “Were you ever associated with any militant organisation?” he said and smiled.
“Lashkar-e-Taiba,” I said, and returned the smile. By now, the senior colleagues in the newsroom were also smiling, suggesting that this was a familiar ritual to them. Before leaving, the CID man said in a half-apologetic tone that he was only carrying out the orders of his bosses.
My seniors told me there was nothing to worry about. All of them had undergone this baptism, which I learnt was called the “BG note”—or background note. One editor said it was the government’s way of “inventorying a newcomer into journalism.”
The CID could have discovered those facts about me without that fleeting interrogation. Why then enact a police-station quiz in a newsroom? The seniors had figured out the answer: the very point of the exercise was to brazenly intimidate journalists. Soon after my interrogation, a senior colleague told me one of the wisest points I have ever heard about Kashmiri media: “You should worry, and worry seriously, when they stop threatening you. It is ok as long as they talk to you and threaten you”—suggesting that for a journalist working in the state, intimidation should be seen as a regular phenomenon, whereas silence would suggest that something more sinister might be underway.