A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, October 2, 2014
Social Media Websites Given To Monkeys With Razors
(October 01, 2014, Bradford UK, Sri Lanka Guardian) Reading
some social media websites from Sri Lanka is like eating three day old
bread with four day old coconut sambal. Given the golden opportunity
like never before, websites have easy access to news which are current
and should be in essence displayed, broadcast or telecast in
nano-seconds.
With the advent of email and internet, various mobile devices and
technology fast developing by the minute, one would think we are on the
cutting edge of modern media providing news such as the colour of the
saree Shiranthi, the first lady, would wear for her New York trip one
week before she left. Or that Sajin Vaas Gunawardene would kick Nonis in
the butt long before it happened.
Many Sri Lankan news websites in provide news which are regurgitated
from vernacular media and foreign agencies are at least two day old.
Comparatively print media, both state and private (the latter cannot be
called independent by any stretch of imagination), which comes out daily
or weekly provide current with on the spot reporting however biased
they may be.
At any given moment most Sri Lankan websites carry the same story
verbatim. They are quite blasé into not bothering to rewrite. The social
as well as mainstream media’s obsession with our politicians begs
belief. The populace which voted our politicians into power has more
earth shattering and human interest stories rather than those about
which restaurants or massage parlours politicians, their offspring and
henchmen frequent.
In his famous essay, A hundred years in 1921, in which his inimitable
quotation Comment is free; facts are sacred, C.P.Scott, the legendary
Manchester Guardian (now The Guardian) editor for almost 50 years , has
this to say:
A newspaper has two sides to it. It is a business, like any other, and
has to pay in the material sense in order to live. But it is much more
than a business; it is an institution; it reflects and it influences the
life of a whole community; it may affect even wider destinies. It is,
in its way, an instrument of government. It plays on the minds and
consciences of men. It may educate, stimulate, assist, or it may do the
opposite. It has, therefore, a moral as well as a material existence,
and its character and influence are in the main determined by the
balance of these two forces. It may make profit or power its first
object, or it may conceive itself as fulfilling a higher and more
exacting function.
Politicians may come and go but the people who vote them into power
remain a constant. Politicians are worse than beggars. Watch them
canvassing on their hands and knees during election time and their
arrogance after being elected. Their rise and fall in politics is
mercurial and is comparable to the green shoots of paddy which stare at
the sky in all its splendour and once ripe the golden grain laden paddy
bows its head. Our politicians remain the green shoots and are out of
the door before they deliver anything resembling a golden harvest to
their people.
So why is it that the media bend over backwards to highlight every move
of the politicians and hardly anything to do with the masses? There is a
wealth of stories out there if you get off your butt and go into the
villages; go to places of worship, visit factories which serve fat-cats
and foreign investors in FTZ where impoverished youth from the villages
are exploited.
Write about the drought caused by over-use of our war resources to feed
hungry chemical factories to the detriment of depriving our farmers of
irrigating their paddy lands and other crops which feed the nation. Tell
about the mother who is sending her children to work breaking stones
instead of attending schools.
What earthly use is modern technology if the user has no inkling on how to use it.
Could it be that these are run by the same lazy bums who used to draw
salaries from state media institutions just for twiddling their thumbs
and visiting the canteen for subsidised meals even when they are off
duty. These media bums are the ones who form media organisations, trade
unions and fight for media freedom by gathering outside Lipton Circus
and Fort Railway Station. It is far easier to do the above than bring in
a decent bit of news item fit to be published. They are not exactly the
Occupy Movement or Flower Power.
When the government clamps down on some websites they cry fowl that the
government is shaking in its boots for their earth shattering
revelations and investigative journalism which earned them laurels from
Burkino Faso and Pitcairn Islands.
Social websites are run by these goons and need we say more.
(The writer has been a journalist for 25 years and worked in
national newspapers as sub-editor, news reporter and news editor. She
was Colombo Correspondent for Times of India and has contributed to Wall
Street Journal where she was on work experience from The Graduate
School of Journalism, UC Berkeley, California. Currently residing in UK
she is also co-founder of EJN (Exiled Journalists Network) UK in 2005
the membership of which is 200 from 40 countries. She can be reached at
pearltheva@hotmail.com)
Posted by
Thavam
