Nearly  a year ago, on 3 January 2010, under the directions of the Andhra  Pradesh High Court, Osmania University witnessed one of the biggest  pro-Telangana student rallies.  Some 150,000 students with identity  cards arrived from colleges all over Telangana and dispersed without  incident at the appointed time after the rally. Given that this came  after weeks of siege of the campus by security forces, it was a  heartening exercise in democratic politics.  
December  2010. In the weeks before the announcement of Srikrishna Committee  report, the campus was once again locked down by special police, rapid  action force and other security personnel at all access points. The  neighbouring localities were put under close watch. The campus road was  reminiscent of the Wagah border! But it was not the Wagah border. The  FORCE was deployed to battle a bunch of impassioned young students from  the Telangana districts. In the name of preventing outsiders from  entering the campus, no buses, media vehicles or cars were allowed to  enter the campus. The university was compelled to close the campus  messes. The students still on campus had no access to food and basic  necessities. Politicians and rights activists were arrested if they  attempted to enter the campus. 
After  the Committee report was made public, the state government has invoked  the Cable Regulation Act and News Broadcasters Association guidelines  and warned the electronic media against covering the activities on  Osmania campus. The diktat was to avoid telecast of live/repeat footage  of violent incidents and provocative speeches. But the result has been  to black out more or less all coverage of the ground level response to  the Srikrishna Committee report by the Telugu News TV channels for a few  days. According to news reports, Raj TV channel, which is being run by  Telengana Rashtra Samiti leader K Chandrashekhar Rao’s family on lease,  was warned several times by the government through the license holder to  refrain from showing visuals of the agitation. They have taken to  flashing breaking news in large font without visuals. 
It  is interesting that the state government has been issuing statements  that there is no police on the campus. The political leaders and the  representatives of AP Civil Liberties Committee have been prevented from  entering the campus (by who one wonders). Because there was little  visual coverage of the events, the truth about the events is not coming  out in public domain. 
This  raises the question: Why are the 16 or so news channels so diligently  following the guidelines of the NBA and the Cable Regulation Act in the  Telangana issue alone? Couple of days after Srikrishna Committee report  was made public, there was a mafia style killing of Maddelacheruvu  Suryanarayana in the heart of Hyderabad. The Telugu news channels went  to town giving saturation coverage, repeatedly showing the bullet-ridden  body and the lolling head of the dead man, violating the NBA guidelines  and the Cable Regulation Act provisions for moderation. 
Of  the 14 or so Telugu news channels only 5 are members of the News  Broadcasters Association. The remaining 9 are not. The big ones have  more or less been back-peddling on the Telangana issue as the owners of  the media houses are from Andhra essentially backing integrationist  politicians. The Hyderabad Police Commissioner, Mr. A.K. Khan, asserts  that he merely wants the channels to adhere to the provisions of Cable  Act. The response of the channels has been to go for an all or none  reading of the statement. They prefer to see coverage as live uplinks  from the OB vans, unfiltered and un-moderated or unrelenting studio  discussions with rabble-rousers. It would have been both a challenge and  an education for the channels to finally find the middle path of  well-informed and fair reporting of a problematic issue. Two very senior  journalists have expressed the feeling that the channel heads are  exploiting the statements of the Commissioner to scuttle coverage. 
The  channels and the government seem to have come to an understanding that  by bottling the campus activity and by news black out they can  effectively remove Telangana from public agenda. The state  administration seems to have come to the conclusion that there is no  Telangana movement without media coverage! The only reports that have  surfaced on the media are those that show the agitators and students as  hooligans, thereby discrediting the movement and the University. It is  not yet clear if the hooliganism shown is by hired political goons or by  students. No political party including TRS has taken the trouble of  calling for peaceful protests that refrain from attacking innocent  bystanders and business establishments. Focusing on violence and  ignoring the issues raised has been a tried and tested technique used  against the CPI (ML) groups for decades. Media effectively deflect the  issue into a law and order problem by adopting this strategy and provide  a justification for the use of force by the state. 
One  might add, after several rounds of recent High Court judgments, there is  no attempt to implement the Cable Regulation Act by constituting  advisory committees at the local and state level to monitor media and  deal with complaints arising from the telecast of objectionable matter.   The Act does not empower the Commissioner to unilaterally decide on  which content to regulate. The Act prescribes a process through which  this is to be done. But the Police Commissioner found instant success in  controlling the coverage of the Telangana issue just by holding a press  conference and a few strategic phone calls! If media houses accept this  for short-term gain, the spectre of this will haunt them in days to  come.
Thanks  to Ratan Tata, today we have a re-popularised phrase to describe what’s  happening not only in our polity but also in our media – Banana  Republic! As in a typical banana republic, the media in our democracy  are ‘allowed’ by the state to show lumpen entertainment, crime, gore and  sex bordering on pornography. When it comes to important political  issues like the securitization of large parts of the country in the name  of maintaining law and order, corporate-politician nexus that brutally  suppresses people’s protests, the state plays a highly proactive role in  ensuring that no civil rights groups or media are around to bring  alternative perspectives into public view.  Denial of the existence of  an issue by insulating it from public gaze can only result in bringing  untold misery to the people, and escalating it to unmanageable  proportions. 
For  about a week, by turning the Osmania University campus into an open-air  prison, and by disallowing any information to come out of the campus, by  repeatedly invoking the Cable Regulation Act for this, the state has  once again proved itself to be a banana republic and not a mature  democracy. The media houses, in their self-interest, do not seem to  recognize that it is a banana republic they are helping build and  profiting from.  
Subsequent  to this, partly inspired by the protests of rights groups and senior  journalists, the channels have formed a Telugu News Broadcasters’  Association. This was followed a day or two later by the formation of  Cable Operators Association. Both the associations have vowed to provide  the best possible coverage of the Telangana movement. It would be a  great step forward for the Telugu news media if these new initiatives  pave the way for independence and self-regulation, Cable Regulation Act  or not.  Given their entrenched economic and political interests, it is  to be seen if media houses can transcend the urges of self-interest to  self-regulate and stop playing footsie with the స్టేట్.