M. C. AND THE PRESS COMMISSION
J. P. CHATURVEDI
First Secretary-General, Indian Federation of
Working Journalists
AND
C. RAGHAVAN
Formerly Editor-in-chief, Press Trust of
We have followed with deep regret the
campaign in the columns of “The Motherland” against Mr. M. Chalapathi
Rau–all in the name of praising the late K. Rama Rao. We, the present writers,
knew Rama Rao fairly intimately right from the time of the Delhi Convention in
1950 until his death. We also know Chalapathi Rau. We
had the privilege of working with both of them in the working journalists’
movement and the founding of the Indian Federation of Working Journalists. We
knew their mutual relationship. There is malicious libel in much of what has
been published. We want to state the following in respect of the falsification
of the history of the IFWJ’s activities of those days
and the Press Commission. Apart from the records with
the Government and the IFWJ, we also have enough evidence to provide our points below.
M. C. was chosen unanimously to preside over
the Delhi Convention even when he was away in the
The Federation unanimously nominated M. C. to
be the member of the Press Commission. In the beginning there were four other
nominees suggested by some units –
K. Rama Rao, Mrinal Kanti Bose, S. P. Thiagarajan and Iswara Dutt. But by the time the IFWJ Working Committee and
Federal Executive Council met in September 1952, M. C. was the unanimous choice
of the rank and file and the leadership. M. C. was chosen because of his
integrated approach of the entire enquiry, and because he commanded the
confidence of all sections of the movement and represented its ethos. No one in
the Federation was overawed by any of the prospective members of the
Commission or their alleged powers of cross-examination. This claim is
fictional.
M. C. was reluctant to become a member of the
Commission because he felt he would not then be able to participate in and
direct the IFWJ’s job of presenting its case and
leading evidence. He reluctantly gave in to our pressure but only on assurance
that all of us would function collectively in the work of the Press Commission.
A 12-member committee was formed with Rama Rao, the Senior Vice-President, as
Chairman and with Mrinal Kanti
Bose, Rana Jung Bahadur
Singh, S.P, Thiagarajan, Tarachand
Gupta, T. Fernandez, Iswara Dutt,
M. V. Sane, S. A. Sastri Jaidev
Gupta, J. P. Chaturvedi and C. Raghavan
(Secretary). At every stage of our work it was a truly collective and
collegiate effort. A seven-member team gave oral evidence–K. Rama Rao, J. P. Chaturvedi,
C. Raghavan, M. V. Sane, V. N. Sinha,
K. N. Nair
and S. A. Sastri. Each person had an allotted subject
or subjects. Rama Rao was the leader of the delegation and dealt mainly with
two subjects–Press Laws and Editor’s Freedom. Other subjects were dealt with by
others and Rama Rao directed the questions to them. Most of the seniors also
appeared individually before the Commission. So did Rama Rao.
In the appointment of the Press Commission,
in determining its terms of reference and whether it should consist of laymen
only (as the proprietors and the INEC wanted) or also representatives of the
profession, in the selection of the Chairman and the lay members of the
Commission, M. C.’s voice and influence was a
deciding factor. People really in the know, like the present
writers, or Dr. B. V. Keskar, then Minister for
Information and Broadcasting, could bear this out.
From the time of the first convention M. C.
took an active part in all our meetings, guided our deliberations, spoke his
mind when warranted, and brought about a consensus. At all public functions, in
connection with our meetings in various parts of
He fully participated in the work of the Commission,
articulated ably his own and the working journalist viewpoints, as members of
the Commission could testify and its records would prove.
We know it for a fact that it was Mr. Chalapathi Rau’s intervention with Jawaharlal Nehru, who
held him in high esteem, that influenced Government’s
decisions on crucial issues–including the enactment of the Working
Journalists Act.
In stating the above we should not be
misunderstood as in any way denigrating Rama. Rao whom we hold in high respect,
as did M. C. Rama Rao too held M. C. in very high esteem and said of him “The
only Editor who can call his soul his own.” I have not dealt with other
denigrations of M. C. whose position in the profession and his acknowledged
qualities as editor, literateur, scribe and original
thinker are so well-established that anonymous scribes can make no dent on it.
M. C. too does not require our defence.