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Somini Sengupta - NYT reporter and terrorist apologist
India Defence ^ | The Acorn

Posted on 07/28/2005 5:33:10 AM PDT by Srirangan

Somini Sengupta, a New York Times reporter files a story from Islamabad on how the India-Pakistan peace process is running into rough weather. Her article is an example on how to write an entire article about India-Pakistan peace process without once using the word ‘terrorist’.



Across the border, Indian leaders wonder aloud whether continued guerrilla attacks, which they say are backed by Pakistan, will derail the peace negotiations.

Ah guerrillas. And they are backed by Pakistan only because Indian leaders say so.
In Kashmir, the abiding source of India-Pakistan troubles, violence has been on a steady, savage rise in recent weeks, with Indian troops and suspected militants clashing nearly daily for the last several days.
Now that they are actually clashing with Indian troops, those guerrillas are now merely suspected to be militants.
On July 19, for instance, a family of six was brutally killed by suspected insurgents, and Indian soldiers killed four men whom they identified as members of a Pakistan-based militant group.

And when they brutally kill a family of six, they become suspected insurgents. Besides when Indian soldiers identify members of Pakistan-based group, there is a need to use words that hint some disbelief. But when Indian soldiers admit wrongly killing innocent civilians, there is no need to credit them for admitting as much.
Early Sunday morning, Indian soldiers shot and killed three young Kashmiri men whom they said they had mistaken for guerrillas

Ah, those guerrillas again.
The next day, a car bomb exploded in front of an Indian Army convoy in Srinagar, the capital of the Indian-held part of Kashmir.

Those suspected insurgents are now not even suspected of setting off the car bomb, which seems to have gone off entirely on its own, without killing anyone. Those soldiers that died didn’t exist at all.
Domestic constituencies are vital for the leaders of both countries. For nearly two weeks, the Indian prime minister, for the first time in many months, has been speaking out about the dangers of Pakistan sheltering guerrillas. “If terrorist elements are not under control, that can upset the progress of the peace process,” Mr. Singh said in an interview with The New York Times in New Delhi, “because we are a democracy.”

And they become guerrillas again, even if in the very next sentence, the Indian prime minister describes them as ‘terrorist elements’. And Musharraf does not have a domestic constituency (in every sense of the word).

At this rate, she may even be able to write an article about 9/11 without using the word terrorist anywhere. Perhaps it was those suspected disgruntled flying school students who, according to American leaders, allegedly rammed what looked like an aircraft into some tall buildings.

Tailpiece: Here’s Somini Sengupta’s warning to the United States government
Washington’s widening friendship with India shows the potential to overshadow its longstanding alliance with Pakistan, heightening the mistrust between the two neighbors


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: georgepolkaward; india; pakistan; terror; usa

1 posted on 07/28/2005 5:33:11 AM PDT by Srirangan
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To: Srirangan

Berkeley.... Cocktail waitress.... NY Times.... No wonder she turned out the way she did.

SOMINI SENGUPTA was born in Calcutta, India. She lived in midwestern Canada for three short years, then was raised mostly in Southern California.

She graduated from UC Berkeley in 1988 with B.A. in English and Development Studies.

Somini has worked as a radio producer, cocktail waitress, community organizer for a few years before joining the Metpro minority training program at the Los Angeles Times in the summer of 1992.

She worked at Newsday on Long Island for two years and came to the New York Times metro section in October 1995. She is now the New York Times West Africa bureau chief, based in Dakar. In early 2005, she will move to South Asia as New Delhi bureau chief, the first South Asian American to hold that position (see list of correspondents here).

Among the awards she has won: the 2004 George Polk Award for foreign reporting; a 2004 National Association of Black Journalists Award for international reporting; a 1997 Newswomen's Club of New York Feature Writing Award; a 1999 SAJA Journalism Award for her reporting about an assault that united Indian immigrants from the Caribbean and India. Her work is featured in The Poynter Institute's Best Newspaper Writing 2000 (Bonus Books, 2000)


2 posted on 07/28/2005 5:38:04 AM PDT by jdm (The answer to the extra credit question on a Columbia U exam is always choice C: "Bush's Fault.")
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To: jdm
National Association of Black Journalists Award for international reporting

How could she have won that award?

3 posted on 07/28/2005 7:50:41 AM PDT by CarrotAndStick (The articles posted by me needn't necessarily reflect my opinion.)
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