Scribes continue to die of Covid-19, JFA mourns their demises

Amalendu Upadhyaya
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Guwahati : Journalists across India continue to die of Covid-19 as they are playing the role of corona-warriors after practising doctors, nurses, sanitation workers, police personnel, etc. Journalists’ Forum Assam (JFA) expresses its profound grief over their demises and urges every scribe to be cautious while reporting the pandemic from the ground.

Lately, the country lost three journalists to the novel coronavirus infection-related ailments within eight days and it simply went on increasing the Covid-19 casualties among the media fraternity for many weeks now.

The latest victim is reported from northern India as Anil Srivastava (68) from Basti in Jammu locality succumbed to Covid-19 complications on 18 September 2020.

Associated with the United News of India for many years, Srivastava died at Basti medical college hospital. Survived by his wife, two sons and other relatives, the journalist also edited local newspapers namely VicharParakh and PrakashTimes.

Earlier, Ravinder Kumar (30) from Una locality in Himachal Pradesh died of Covid-19. Working for Dainik Jagran, Kumar was not feeling well for some time. He was sent to the hospital after developing symptoms of Covid-19 on 9 September and he died on the way. His cremation was conducted following Covid-19 protocols. Kumar left behind his parents, wife, brother along with a host of relatives.

Similarly, Abohar (Punjab) based journalist  Naresh Bajaj (57) succumbed to Covid-19 complications on 10 September. Bajaj worked as a correspondent to  SachKahoon, a newspaper published from Sirsa.

Importantly, the journalist was also very active as a frontline corona warrior in the pandemic.

Assam also witnessed two journo-victims recently as Udalguri based correspondent  Dhaneswar Rabha (35) died of Covid-19 at Guwahati medical college hospital on 6  September. Rabha is the first scribe in northeast India to succumb to Covid-19 complications. He was suffering from renal problems and went for regular dialysis. Rabha left behind his parents, wife, two kids, a host of relatives. Next day, senior journalist Ashim Dutta passed away at   Silchar medical college hospital.

Dutta (65), who worked for a Bengali daily in Barak valley, was also suffering from kidney problems. He was admitted to the hospital after testing positive for the novel coronavirus infection. A pass-out from Gauhati University,  Dutta left behind his wife, only daughter and other relatives.

Weeks back, Mumbai based senior film-journalist Shyam Sarma, Nellore (Andhra Pradesh) based scribe  Narayanam Seshacharyulu, Pune based television reporter  Pandurang Raikar, Kanpur based television journalist  Neelanshu Shukla, Patiala based photojournalist  Jai Deep, Tirupati based television reporter Madhusudan Reddy & video journalist M Parthasarathy succumbed to the infections.

The list also includes television reporter Ramanathan & news videographer E Velmurugan from Chennai, news presenter Davinder Pal Singh from Chandigarh, television scribe Manoj Kumar from Hyderabad, print-journalist Pankaj Kulashrestha from Agra,  Orissa’s journalists Simanchal Panda, K Ch Ratnam & Priyadarshi Patnaik, etc.

Kolkata based photojournalist Ronny Roy became the first Indian scribe to lose his battle against the dreaded virus. New Delhi scribe Tarun Sisodia killed himself undergoing Covid-19 treatment at AIIMS.

Maharashtra’s veteran journalist Ashok Churi, who edited Marathi weekly PalgharTimes, died at a Palghar based hospital, who later tested positive for Covid-19. The printer-publisher of AsomiyaKhabar (Rantu Das) also died at a Guwahati hospital and later tested positive for the virus infection.

Expressing concern over hundreds of city-based media persons lately tested positive for Covid-19, JFA president Rupam Barua and secretary Nava Thakuria repeated the appeal to media group managements to come clean on their employees’ health status as part of social responsibility. The forum added that news channels and newspapers continue identifying other Covid-19 patients, but they collectively remain silent when their employees turn positive (except a few infected scribes made personal revelations in social media).

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