
Jug Suraiya's column in today's pages of the Times of India was conspicuous by its absence.
Suraiya, a regular contributor to the paper, has two columns, "Jugular Vein" and "Second Opinion". Today's offering did not appear in print, though it was published on the newspaper's website.
The piece was titled "Escape goats: How to pass the buck when finding someone to blame for bungling the corona crisis". A satirical piece, it featured a conversation between a "supreme leader" and his "supreme sidekick" on how to "counter the increasingly bad press they're getting amid the rising tide of Covid cases in the country".
No points for guessing who is who.
The Wire republished the column on its website, with Suraiya's permission, after which several prominent personalities criticised the Times of India for not carrying it in its print edition.
Pretty shameful of @timesofindia to scrap this column by Jug Suraiya from its print edition because it's critical of the way Covid-19 pandemic has been worsened thanks to Narendra & Shah.
— Saket Gokhale (@SaketGokhale) May 14, 2021
The crisis we face today is amplified due to the media toeing the line of these 2 people. https://t.co/QhcLmx5cDC
Promised to call out media sycophancy. So @timesofindia
— Derek O'Brien | ডেরেক ও'ব্রায়েন (@derekobrienmp) May 14, 2021
India’s legendary satire writer Jug Suraiya’s weekly column missing in print edition of TOI today. Learnt on SM it was yanked and SPIKED even tho it doesn’t mention Narendra/Amit by name.Spine TOI ? https://t.co/xbqNySHXDz
Jug Suraiya's dropped TOI column: "Sup Sidekick:We must distance ourselves from all policies, past, present and future. That way we remain escape goats.
— Prashant Bhushan (@pbhushan1) May 14, 2021
Sup Leader:You mean scapegoats.
SS: No. I mean escape goats.We escape by making others into scapegoats" https://t.co/2RGp1IsQyc
Newslaundry's calls to the newspaper's editorial editor, Swagato Ganguly, were unanswered.
Suraiya himself, however, told Newslaundry that a "mountain is being made out of a molehill".
"Like any publication, the TOI reserves the right to print or withhold any contribution made to it," he said. "In this case, no reason was given to me as to why my column was not used in the print edition. However it was carried as a blog on the TOI online site.”
He added, “I guess it's a free country, or supposed to be, and as such I'm free to write what I like and the TOI, or any other publication, is equally free to carry it if or where they like.”
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