Illustration by Rohail Safdar
Sometimes an incident shapes a national narrative and sparks public action.
On January 4, 2018, a six-year-old girl in Kasur was kidnapped, raped and murdered. Cue the entrance of the media — print and electronic — to the scene. But while the incident itself could have been a watershed moment on child abuse, gender-based violence and legislation around child rights, the media took it upon themselves to rouse emotions and push the case towards its conclusion.
Perhaps this was an exercise in mismanaged morality.
Today, the highly publicised rape case has gone on the backburner for the media. There is little noise on the legislation front. And people, too, seem to have either forgotten or lost interest in the case. This is at odds with how the matter was kept in the public’s imagination for about three weeks. In fact, too much noise around the rape case seemed to drown out the issues at the heart of case: child protection, sensitisation and child rights legislation.
It is, therefore, worthwhile to revisit how the media reported on the case and how its actions seemed to trivialise, and in some cases, obfuscate the nature and gravity of the situation.
Reporting the taboos of society needs a new repertoire as existing norms in the print and electronic media are merely fulfilling the public’s morbid curiosities
The media has a responsibility of shaping perceptions. It does so by what it is reporting, but more importantly, in the language of reporting. For the first three, four days of the incident, words such as ‘nanhi pari’ [little fairy], ‘masoom Zainab’ [innocent Zainab], ‘nanhi kali’ [little bud], ‘darinda sift’ [animal-like] made the rounds on news channels and in print media. The victim’s picture in a pink shirt and her dead body in the dump was a part of every news report in electronic media — some even argue that the case would not have gained as much traction had the girl’s pictures not been used. Then came the CCTV footage of the criminal. The footage was on loop for hours on the news channels.
In this news cycle, did the media seek to inform and educate viewers and readers? Did it build a larger case around child sexual abuse?
The following content analysis investigates how the media reported on the case between January 10 and January 31, 2018. For print, nine newspapers were monitored, including four English-language dailies, five Urdu-language dailies and a weekly magazine. News reports, pictures, articles, editorials, letters to the editor, opinions, cartoons, advertisements and interviews were monitored in the print media. This made for a total of 992 news items that were monitored in print.
For the electronic media, six mainstream news channels were monitored. We monitored an hour-long news bulletin for each channel as well as a current affairs talk show. In three weeks, this amounted to more than 260 hours of electronic news content or 12 hours every day. In total, we went through 386 news items in the electronic news media that pertained to the Kasur child rape case. Following is the outcome of our research.
PLACEMENT OF NEWS CONTENT IN THE PRINT MEDIA
Every newspaper operates on two principles: the “newsworthiness” of a story and commercial interests.
Newsworthiness is about whether a story is timely, significant, has happened close to home and has an element of human interest. The more newsworthy a story, the more prominent its placement in the newspaper. So, for example, the most relevant and pertinent story of the day finds space on the front page, and so on. The op-ed pages contain the newspaper’s editorial line, opinion columns, cartoons, and letters to the editor. As with the front page, the most relevant and timely topics get more space on op-ed pages.
Of the 992 news items monitored in the print media, almost 30 percent of the Kasur-related content was placed on the front pages. About 24 percent content appeared on opinion pages while 32 percent was published on inside and other pages. Only 12 percent of the total news items monitored were on the back pages.
SENSATIONALISED MEDIA CONTENT
Despite the widespread coverage, however, almost one-third of the news items on the Kasur case had elements of sensational content.
Sensationalism in the media is all about hype — events and topics are twisted and turned to suit a certain editorial bias, and worse, manipulate the facts of a story. It plays with the audience’s emotions. It employs the use of fear, anger, excitement and gloom in an attempt to increase viewership, ratings and, of course, profits.
This kind of journalism — inaccurate and exaggerated — is also referred to as yellow journalism.
For the Kasur case, we considered dramatisation in broadcast news as sensational, and in print media, the language and increased reporting frequency as elements of sensationalism.
In fact, the electronic media through its treatment of the rape case turned a gory situation into a circus of sorts. Audiences were drawn in with the Breaking News label in red to reveal a minor update on the case. Displaying tickers with the words ‘Breaking News’ when the news is actually just in is understandable. But labelling a piece of news in the 9pm bulletin as “breaking” even when it actually happened earlier in the day is ludicrous.
This was a moment to be captured for greater good — sensitisation, awareness, legislation — but too much noise turned it into case-specific coverage rather than a phenomenon-wide coverage.
But this was a common practice in some mainstream channels before any news related to the Kasur case was broadcast. Undoubtedly, this creates sensationalism in content.
It wouldn’t be inaccurate to describe most news items on the case being presented as “breaking news” — loud, sensational and with flashy headlines. In the electronic media, for the first three days, the top three or four stories remained Kasur-related while the rest of the stories reported comments from politicians demanding quick and strict action from the government.
Meanwhile, the sound score for nearly every item broadcast was melancholic. One newscaster delivered the news with her minor daughter sitting in her lap. When CCTV footage of the incident found its way to the media, nearly every channel played it on loop for hours as “breaking news.” One channel, BOL News, angled the story in such a way so as to implicate the victim herself: “qatil ke saath galiyon mein ghoomti phirti rahi” [(the victim) was seen roaming around the streets with her murderer].
Similarly, in the print media, for the first three days since the rape, quarter-page sized reports were part of both front and back pages of various dailies. Surprisingly, only 24 pictures appeared as separate news. In some cases, news items took up more than half-page space on the front page while in others, news, opinions and editorial content were entirely focused on the incident. Meanwhile, the Urdu-language dailies ascribed terminologies such as kali [flower bud] and farishta [angel] for the victim.
With huge headlines, a total of 130 news items in the print media out of the 992 monitored were sensationally presented. This makes about 13 percent of the total print content. Electronic media, in comparison, is way ahead of the print media with 76 percent of their content being sensationalised.
POSITIVE MEDIA CONTENT