Monday, 25 May 2015
Saturday, 23 May 2015
PrezSpeak: Going Global, Shining Local
Friends,
I hope you have been noting our activities on PRapport
and via mails from Jayaram.
This week, I have a lot to talk about!
PRCI-International
First and foremost, we are all set to see our dream of
going global coming true. PRCI-International will soon be a reality, and not a
mere promise or announcement.
With our dynamic Vinay Kumar, Director –PRCI-I, getting into
action, we shall open our UAE Chapter in December.
Dubai is calling us! Let’s go there in good numbers and
spread the PRCI movement.
Please indicate your confirmation to join the team to
Dubai so that we can block your tickets. You are aware as to how airfares shoot
up as we get closer to the travel date. We are negotiating with travel agents
to do bulk booking at concessional tariff. The tickets can be blocked ex the
city of your choice.
To give you an idea of return airfare by Indigo to Dubai:
|
Rs 16,800 (ex-Bangalore)
Rs 19,600 (ex-Kochi)
Rs 23,800 (ex-Mumbai and Kolkata)
RS. 15,700 (ex.Delhi )
VISA expenses
come to another Rs 5,000 each
|
So, please rush with your confirmations latest by May 31, 2015. We can make the
payments within a month. PRCI HQ is compiling the list.
Other details have been mailed to all Chapters.
Our next international destination can be either
Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Oman or Sharjah.
We are also working aggressively on PRCI-I USA (with
multiple chapters), Australia and even SAARC.
Daughters’ Day
Getting back to India, suggest we plan for our annual the
Daughters’ Day programmes for July 03, 2015 (coinciding with PRCI formation day)
onward as per local convenience.
This year, our focus can be in sexual harassment at work
places.
We have decided to set up a Compliance Cell which is
mandatory for any organization with more than 10 people working. It is
applicable to organizations like PRCI and even sports events and clubs.
We are happy to inform you that ComplyKaro – an organization
spearheading awareness about meeting the compliance – has agreed to be our
honorary advisor in setting up and running the Compliance Cell @PRCI. Please
check Vishal Kedia’s interview (Comply or face Jail) to PRapport for details - http://prapport.blogspot.in/2015/04/comply-or-face-jail-must-comply-with.html
The Cell details will shortly be announced in consultation
with the GC.
We can plan activities related to preventing sexual
harassment at work places and Vishal Kedia will be happy to guide us.
Chapter, YCC Activities
I am sure we are all working on and conducting local
level activities. Please flood us with reports and pictures for PRapport.
Soon, we will have the PRCI mag Chanakya and YCC mag Kautilya
out.
Please send in your contributions in the form of:
- Activity reports
- Planned activities
- Opinion pieces
We shall soon float a topic for your and other PR professionals’ opinions which we can carry in Chanakya.
Till then....
Zombies in the Cloud!
Officials at all levels, from central
ministries to local governments and
mini departments have invested vast sums of money in their own websites.
But users seeking
latest official data and information or current policy line are often
frustrated. Many pages have not been updated in years.
Some agencies that were long ago
disbanded or merged with others have left their old web pages floating around
the internet like space junk.
Some sites work only with certain web
browsers, some do not work at all and some contain malware.
This assessment by the Economist
(18/4), though relates to Chinese official websites, could as well be true of
Indian official websites.
A website should not hang like the
piece of muscle that covers the hind part of
a quadruped. - S Narendra, Former Spokesperson, Govt of India
Friday, 22 May 2015
He said and he didn't! Britain, a 4th Rate Power?
And how I survived the litmus test for PR credibility!
By
S.Narendra
(Former
Advisor to PM and ex-spokesperson, Government of India)
Ceremonial
visits are normally filled with visually rich ceremonies and banquets and above
all photo ops. When the British Queen Elizabeth’s visit to India was proposed in 1993, during prime minister John
Major’s India tour, it was supposed to
be a goodwill visit filled with symbolism and sentiments for strengthening a historic partnership. But when the visit
actually happened in 1997 October, it was trailed by controversy and left a
further trail of avoidable bitterness.
![]() |
| Right to mediate in Paradise on Earth? |
The
then Labour government of Tony Blair in London had openly declared its
intention to play a mediator’s role in the Kashmir dispute between India and
Pakistan. What was more galling was that this government had claimed that such
a role falls naturally on Britain as a former ruler of the sub-continent! And
this stand was being articulated by its foreign secretary Robin Cook, who was
to accompany the Queen during her India itinerary that coincided with India’s
50th anniversary of independence. Another sore point with India was
that the Queen was arriving in India after a visit to Islamabad, where Pakistan
was bound to put the Kashmir issue in front.
Gore-Bhoot: In Delhi, the British
envoy was Sir David Gore-Booth, had not endeared himself to both the British
and the Indian media with his public pronouncements on the Kashmir issue and
his unwelcome comments on the Punjab people’s demand for a royal apology for
the atrocities committed by British officials at Jalianwalabagh in 1929. While
the British media referred to him as blumbering Sir David, the Hindi media had
begun to refer to this envoy as ‘Gore-bhoot’ (white ghost).
The
visits of ceremonial heads of states such as that of the Queen are largely
surrounded by atmospherics and high but empty diplomatese. In this case the
atmosphere was getting more and more polluted with indiscretions on both the
sides. The advance party that came to India from the Buckingham palace were
very arrogant and had obviously forgotten that India was no longer their colony.
A brief circulated by them to Indian
business persons and others who were to interact with the visiting head of
Britain contained tips like, when you meet the dignitary, address her as ‘Your Majesty’ first time and then
onwards ‘Ma’m’ pronounced as xxxx etc.
As
they say when things go wrong, they tend to go very wrong. The government was
keeping its fingers crossed and was treading very
carefully to ensure that the Queen’s sojourn passes off without more
controversy. In the meanwhile, there was news in media circles that a London based
journalist of Indian origin, Shyam Bhatia (known for his off –beat new stories)
was in the capital. He is the son of a great editor (late) Prem Bhatia whose
columns were noted for their elegance as well as insights. Senior Bhatia
belonged to a fast eroding generation of media persons who were sticklers for
facts and propriety. I had the privilege
of knowing him as an elderly friend, who
would make it a point to seek an
appointment with me every
month for a briefing. Senior Bhatia was a
contemporary of the then prime minister Inder
Kumar Gujaral as well his family friend from Punjab.
Back
to Bhatia Jr. His presence in Delhi on the eve of the Queen’s visit shadowed by
controversies and I had requested the
prime minister’s personal office to inform me if Shyam Bhatia
soiught a meeting (as he was
bound to do as a family friend) with Gujral. I learnt a few days later that
Shyam Bhatia had departed, taking this matter off my mind.
The
Queen’s arrival in Delhi was just a few days away. On not-so fine morning around 5.30, Mike Wooldridge
of BBC New Delhi bureau rang me up. He first apologised to me for phoning at
such an early hour. The foreign correspondents rarely call at inconvenient
hours unless the matter brooks no delay. Wooldridge of BBC, was indeed checking
up an important story circulating in
London. He said: “Narendraji, has the prime minister called Britain, a fourth rate
power? The Observer of London is publishing an interview of Prime Minister
Gujral, and if he has given the
interview, BBC would like to use the story. London wants me to get
confirmation’. Wooldridge also mentioned that the Observer seems to a have had a
recorded tape of the interview. I requested the correspondent for 30 minutes to
respond.
With
some difficulty the PM was woken up (as I said in my previous column he was a
late riser!) and I informed him of the interview. His first reaction was to
deny the interview. When I told him that his interview was on tape, and gave
him a gist of Wooldridge’s query to me, he seemed to be very upset.
He told me
that what he had spoken to Shyam Bhatia was not supposed to be on record. I
submitted to PM that we cannot prevent BBC from broadcasting the story, since
the Observer interview would be carried by almost all the British media. I
suggested that during the course of the day we could perhaps say, as a face
saving measure, that the PM has been misquoted. I also requested him to immediately
advice the foreign ministry about the diplomatic steps they should take for
damage control.
![]() |
| Off-the-record, On the record |
When
I returned Wooldridge’s call and told him that BBC could go ahead with the
story, he could not believe: “Sir, you are not denying it”.
Spokespersons’ Credibility: A government’s (or for
that matter any organisations’) interests are best served, if and when it helps
the Spokesperson retain his or her credibility, rather than make him defend the
indefensible. A compromised news source is not an asset either to the
organization or to the media. In the episode narrated here, if I had denied the
PM’s interview or asked BBC not to use the story, not only my credibility as a
Spokesperson would have suffered a major dent, but also any attempt to put pressure
on the media not to use a factual story would have dissuaded the
newspersons from contacting me for checking up facts or
stories.
![]() |
| The author |
Ours
is a very difficult and delicate role where we have to guard (and balance) the
interest of the organisation that we represent as well as the media person who
is our gateway to the media world. During my stint as the Spokesperson of
Government of India, I had tried to build a record of not misleading the media
as well as not to put pressure on media when their facts were correct, except
in cases where the very survival of the government was at stake or when it
involved matters of national security.
When
I took over as the Principal Information Officer and Spokesperson, I had announced
to the media that I would be available on 24x7 basis for them to check any
information relating to the government. As a result more than once (for
instance during the break-out of Surat Plague, seize of holy
shrines in Kashmir), I was woken up by agencies at the dead of night for checking
on rumours. The foreign correspondents stationed in India rarely picked up a
story relating to government from Indian media or wire agencies before
verifying its veracity from me. Because of my public announcement, no one in
media could have an excuse for not checking up information before publishing a
story (sunarendra@gmail.com).
.
.
Thursday, 21 May 2015
Fonte by ‘One Source’ @Press Club is super hit
Members
from Mumbai, Pune, Ahmedabad
join in networking event
![]() |
| Ashish Chauhan |
A movement that started with the creation of one WhatsApp
group of 30 people on the 22nd of July last year, has now turned out to be an
850-member strong community of media professionals.
The online group One Source organised its inaugural
member off line meetup Fontè at the Press Club-Mumbai Mumbai in association
with event partners, Public Relations Council of India last Thursday.
Mr. Ashish Kumar Chauhan, Managing Director & CEO of
Bombay Stock Exchange and Mr. Gurbir Singh, Deputy Editor, Business World and Chairman, Press Club-Mumbai were the
guests of honour.
While Mr. Chauhan spoke on the importance of in financial
services, Mr Singh dealt with the issue of media expectations from PR
professionals. PRCI National president B N Kumar announced the launch of a guest faculty pool by PRCI to
depute veteran professionals to mass communication colleges.
The effort behind the deliberations was to educate the
community members present on how public relations as an industry has the
potential to become a national game changer, rising beyond the cliché of
clip-counting and media relations.
Sandeep Rao, founder member of One Source, said in his
welcome address: “The group’s endeavour would be to act a knowledge platform
apart from facilitating the members exchange industry information and media
contacts. For this, we will be happy to tie-up with professional bodies like
PRCI.”
![]() |
| Gurbir Singh |
“We hope to build bonds and strengthen mutual trust among
the professionals encompassing PR, advertising, media and HR practitioners,” he
said.
![]() |
| BNK |
Started with the objective of opening channels of communication
within the industry of communication and facilitating knowledge flow within the
industry, One Source has members across more than 40 traditional and full
service communication agencies, personnel across news media houses such as the
BCCL group and Business Standard, brand custodians across names such as DSP
BlackRock, Cairn India, NSE, Myntra, BSE, FICCI, Housing.com and CII, as well
as allied service professionals such as digital influencers, content providers
and head hunters, all of who come together to help the community drive value
for itself.
Encouraged by the success of
the event with over 100 people participating, One Source now plans Fonte at
other cities, including Delhi and Bangalore.
Contact: Sandeep: +91 97690 79273 or Harsh: +91 98706
31557.
Wednesday, 20 May 2015
PRCI Delhi Chapter gets new blood!
Happy to announce the list of new list of office-bearers of PRCI's Delhi Chapter.
We are glad that Mr Gaganjit Singh, Executive Director of Institute of Marketing & Management, has agreed to lead the efforts rejuvenate the Chapter and we are quite sure that with the infusion new blood the Chapter will perform well and keep PRCI flag flying high in the Capital City and NCR.
Senior journalist Ritukant Ojha (Ex Express Group) will help as strengthen our base and activities in the NCR as well. We are sure he will get all support from Mr S Narendra and Deepak Jolly.
We sincerely thank Mr N D Rajpal, Mrs Vijayalakshmi, Ms Renuka Salwan, Mr S K Kaul and Mr S R Radhakrishnan for their tireless efforts in putting together all good people who are needed to revitalise the Delhi Chapter.
Let us all congratulate the new office-bearers and the Executive Committee members and wish them all the best.
| Name | PRCI Designation | Company/Position |
| Chairman | Executive Director, Institute of Marketing and Management | |
| Mr Gaganjit Singh | ||
| Mr Arun Arora | Vice Chairman | Cairn India |
| Mr V K Cherian | Vice Chairman | COAI |
| Mr Molijit Lal | Secretary | IMM |
| Mr Chiranjit Chakraborty | Joint Secretary | Concept PR |
| Mr Ramesh Kumar | Treasurer | NHPC |
| EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE | ||
| Mr R H Pathak | Member | Essar Group |
| Mr Sanjay Vashisht, | Member | ITPO |
| Mr J P Dhaundiyal | Member | Solar Energy Society of India |
| Mr Anoop Joshi | Member | SAIL |
| Ms Neelam Yadav | Member | Power Grid Corporation |
| Ms Neelam Jain | Member | Canadian Embassy |
| Mr Gaurav Anand | Member | NHPC |
| Mr Ritukant Ojha | Member | PROact Brandcom |
| Ms Sonia Sarin | Member | Aim High Consulting |
Ms Renuka Salwan, Zonal Chairperson (North) and Mr S K Kaul and Mr S R Krishnan (Directors – NE) are the ex-officio members of the Committee.
Mr N D Rajpal (Chairman GC), Mrs Vijayalakshmi (Direcor GC) Mr S Narendra (Director NE and Advisor YCC) and Mr Deepak Jolly (Director NE) are the permanent invitees for the Chapter.
Monday, 18 May 2015
Standing ovation for A Standothon to ‘kill’ exam fever!
Organized by
PRCI General Secretary Bharathi Singh’s
Sa-Mudra in association with Yuva Help
Examinations
season always causes anxiety and distress among students, at times few fragile
ones suffer suicidal tendencies. The number of youth committing suicides due to
fear of failure or disappointments in results in increasing, last year more
than 80 youth have succumbed.
In order to
create awareness among students, parents and the public in general public - SA-MUDRA
foundation organized a standothon themed #LOVE LIFE on Tuesday the 5th
May 2015. Over 800 students, parents and general public participated in this
programme.
standothon organized is a
right effort in a right direction.
Shri. M.B. Jayaram, Chairman Emeritus, PRCI, Dr.
T.S. Chandrashekar, Adolscent Psychologist and K.C. Janardhan Educationist were
among the guests.
The students
formed in human chain from margosa road from 18th cross to 5th
cross Malleshwaam where in the pre university department and SSLC board are
situated, holding placards with positive motivational slogans
like ‘ failure is not final’ ‘failure is not fatal’ ‘ failure is part of
learning’ # LOVE LIFE !! and distributinDr. Nagambika Devi Sharma IAS - Principal Secretary, Department of Youth empowerment and Shri. Mohd. Mohsin IAS – commissioner for Public instruction declared the campaign open.
Smt. Bharathi Singh, Founder and Chief SA-MUDRA FOUNDATION who was the main organizer of this campaign highlighted the need for such important and essential campaigns to create awareness among the youth/ students reflecting on the topic of the campaign ‘failure in Exams need not be Failure in Life’. Life is more precious than any exams and failures hence LOVE LIFE!!
Dr. Nagambika Devi lauded the honest and voluntary efforts of SA-MUDRA FOUNDATION in dedicatedly working to empower the youth/ bar students without any financial considerations. She said that 1000s of students were benefitted by the Foundation.
Shri. Mohd. Mohsin complemented SA-MUDRA FOUNDATION - YUVA HELPLINE for helping the government during examinations and said that the g relevant handouts.
SA-MUDRA
FOUNDATION which has been in the fore front of counseling the youth/ students
addressing issues focused on educational, career and personal problems has been
operating YUVA HELPLINE continuously since 2008. Especially, during examinations,
the foundation has been working in collaboration with the SSLC Board and Pre
university department, offers telephonic counseling. This has been appreciated
by the students, parents, educationists, institutions, the Govt. and the
public. So far nearly about 9000+ students have been benefited.
Friday, 15 May 2015
Stunning video: Responsible behaviour is also patriotism!
This 3 -minute clip will leave a lump in your throat!
A must watch for all, all of us!
How PM Gujral bore the brunt for Media kite flying!
Costly
lesson – There is nothing like a friendly journo
By S.
Narendra
(Former
Spokesperson, Govt of India)
The distinction of giving the maximum number
of media interviews in the shortest tenure as Prime Minister goes to former PM
Inder Kumar Gujral. He was one political leader who could offer the most
quotable quotes in Punjabi, Hindi and in English which the media would just lap
it up. His tenure of 11 months as PM can be described as governance through
media interviews.
I had the privilege of serving as his
information adviser as well as the government spokesperson. Soon after his
swearing in on 21st of April 1997 in the Ashoka hall of Rastrapati Bhavan,
he spotted me at the rear of hall and walked up to me and took my hand, and said :
“Narender, I will not let you leave the government ( I was contemplating early
retirement then); you will be my information adviser.”
Breakfast
Interviews: I had instructions to meet the Prime Minister daily
at his breakfast table for a briefing. He was not in
the pink of health (was very hard of
hearing in one ear), and a late riser. As a result the breakfast
time was anywhere around 9.30 AM and at times could stretch up to even 11, unless
he had some official engagement early in the day. What I found was that on most
days, besides me, there would be some senior media person as well for breakfast,
often a team of them, and the breakfast would be followed by an
interview. Despite being the designated information adviser, I was in dark about such media meetings. I was not the lone person to be so surprised by morning media visitors; even his close personal staff, who were supposed to arrange his day’s schedule were more than once caught off guard by the prime minister’s morning media engagements!
He was extremely warm and open with me, gave
me free access and sought and appreciated my inputs. As a former I & B
minister, one of the most
outstanding in that slot, Gujral
not only was very familiar with the
media world but had close contacts with owners and senior professionals.
As Mrs Indira Gandhi’s trusted lieutenant in the 1960s and early 1970s, he had
taken some pioneering steps to get more of Indian news across to the world and
had contributed greatly to the development of All India Radio and DD. I had the
occasion to be associated with this area
of work and as a result, we had developed a close bond.
On one
particular morning, I went to
join the Gujral at his breakfast
table, and found a very familiar senior financial journalist already closeted
with him. Amidst the breakfast, the journalist and the prime minister would
break into conversation in Punjabi. It so happened that Gujral knew the
journalist and her family and their talk often dwelt with old times and
exchange of information about common acquaintances. The prime minister asked me
to go ahead with my briefing, as the media person was present in her capacity.
Besides conversations in Punjabi, the
journalist representing the Economic Times began to slip into English and sought
PM’s views on some very delicate monetary policy issues. While popping such
questions, the journalist would also thrust
a tape recorder into PM’s face.
As
I said, Gujral was very hard of hearing in one ear and unfortunately the journalist
was seated on the side of the bad ear. Each time a question on the monetary
policy was shot, the prime minister would turn to me to ask “what was the question”.
Not only I was repeating the question, so that Gujral hears it properly but
also cautioning the prime minster about the tape recorder.
More than once I
told Gujral that issues
concerning the monetary policy was the exclusive domain of the Reserve Bank of India
and thjat the journalist should be directed to RBI. And. Gujral would ask the lady to follow my advice.
It is necessary to
explain here that the prime minister, was not very familiar with the complex
issues of monetary policy ( this was as expected, because most PMs leave such financial matters to their finance
ministers and the central bank). The
Journalist was trying to extract answers from Gujral about the day-to-day
management of the par value or exchange rate of a currency.
As the breakfast lengthened,
the journalist’s questions started drawing the PM into questions like whether
his government would prefer to float the Rupee in a band. An exchange rate band
means the value of a currency (Rupee) against another currency ,in place of
being a fixed one, is allowed the by
the central bank (in this case RBI) to fluctuate within a certain predetermined
limit. (Chinese remmimbi is allowed to
float in this fashion).
The information sought was highly sensitive,
and even the finance ministry would prefer to stay out of it. And this was the subject
of speculator in the forex market where millions of Rupees would be at stake on
such piece of information. As Gujral was not hearing the questions properly their
import was getting lost on him. At this stage I got up and took the tape
recorder away from the journalist and pointed out to the PM that the journalist
was misusing her family relationship.
Not a single question had been answered
by the prime minister, as I had firmly intervened every time the journalist was
trying to convert an informal meeting into an interview on such a sensitive
issue. I had repeated every time that
the journalist should direct her questions to
RBI .The journalist , before leaving assured the PM that she would not use any information (and there was none!) that she had gained in
that meeting.
A
Telephonic Blast: Early next morning, there
was a blast on telephone from a highly
upset finance minister, P. Chidambaram:
“what kind of interviews you arrange for the prime minister. Have you seen
Economic Times? Do you know what are the consequences ......”.No amount of explanation
by me that there was no such interview could convince him. The Economic Times
had a banner story: Rupee to Float in a Band, attributing the information to the PM
himself.
When I spoke to the editor of the newspaper
and protested about the story, he first threatened, stating that I was forcing
him to run the transcript of the interview. I told him that he would be doing a
great service to the country, and the PM,
if he were to do so. I asked him either to run the transcript or sack
the reporter concerned. An hour later the editor rang up to apologise, confirming that there was no
tape.
RBI
Loses Millions: There was mayhem on the exchange
market, as the Rupee wobbled violently, because of the newspaper story. The Government
and the RBI were caught in the situation of a person who faces the question ‘have
you stopped beating your wife?’ Whether
the story was denied or met with a ‘no comment’, they would send signals for
speculators to gamble and put pressure on
the Rupee. According to sources, the RBI had to intervene in the
exchange market to shore up the Rupee and lost about Rs 800 crores in one day.
There
is nothing like a friendly journalist! This
advice was given to me by a former journalist, Lajpat Rai Nair, who went on to become the
Principal Information Officer initiated me into the Indian Information Service in 1964. Nair was one
of my predecessors as well as the founder -Director of the Indian Institute of
Mass Communication. He had served under Jawaharlal Nehru. He had told our first
batch of trainees at IIMC that we should
be very friendly towards the journalists but not to mistake them for friends. He had explained
that news sources (PR) and
news users (media) ought to have an incestuous relationship,
but
each has different obligations and loyalties.
While each should carry the trust of the other, both should respect each others’ professional
positions and obligations, and draw a mutually understood grey line between the
personal relationships and professional ones.
![]() |
| The Author |
PM
Blamed, unjustifiably: Noted economist and
commentator S.L. Rao in his book Elephant Can’t Dance ( a collection of his
articles in media) blamed former prime minister Gujral , for speaking out of
turn to media on a subject he did not know that cost RBI a huge sum. But, now, you know where the
blame belongs. There by hangs a lesson for us in media relations.
(Coming up: Britain –A Fourth Rate Power and
Royal Skirt or Royal Bow?)
Monday, 11 May 2015
PrezSpeak -5: Harnessing Youth Power
This week, I have an interesting development. PRCI-Mumbai
is getting associated with a WhatsApp group called One Source for a get together
of young PR professionals. The Group predominantly has young and upcoming
professionals.
The event will be held on Thursday evening. BSE CEO Mr
Ashish Chauhan will be the chief guest. We will have veteran journalist Gurbir
Singh also addressing the professionals on What Media expects of PR
professionals and many Dos and DONTs for the new comers.
PRCI should have many more such networking events and
talk about them. It will help us bring in professionalism among upcoming PR
stars.
The Going Global endeavour is working well. Vinay Kumar,
the PRCI-I director, has done quite a bit of ground work. We have begun to
feelers from the US – Atlanta and New Jersey – and even Oman.
Hope all these efforts will fructify shortly.
Once a BBC correspondent was asked as to what do they when
there is no breaking news. He said: “We do homework and study the areas where
we work.”
On YCC front, I am sure Geetha Shankar and Co are working
on some plans. It is time to plan now since the colleges are shut for summer
holidays. We can launch activities in June-July.
The newly appointed YCC Secretary (National) Shreya Banda,
I guess, is getting set to take new responsibilities under Geetha’s leadership.
Meanwhile, your e-mag continues to do wonders across the
world. Our friends in the US seem to be in a hurry to give a 1,000 pageviews
and in Germany they are racing towards 200.
Mr Narendra’s piece on Pak N-Bomb is literally becoming
viral with 107 views already!
Have a great time!
Friday, 8 May 2015
How 'Pak N-Bomb Blast' was averted at Indian Press Conference!
By S.Narendra
Former
Spokesperson, Govt. Of India
An Untold story, for the 1st time in PRapport
Buddha had smiled a second time on Operation Shakti day - May 11, 1998!
The decision to explode the nuclear bomb had been taken by Prime Minister Vajpayee heading the first NDA government and the US and its allies swiftly tried to make India a ‘nuclear pariah’ by imposing strict sanctions. Even while the diplomatic pressure and tension was mounting on India,
another kind of unease was palpable in top echelons in nuclear establishment. Quoting unidentified sources from the latter, media was reporting that the nuclear establishment headed by Dr Chidambaram (chairman of Atomic Energy Commission), and Dr Ani l Kakodkar (head of Bhabha Atomic Research Center) , (and their predecessors) were unhappy that their stellar, silent , role in making India a nuclear power, was receiving less media attention.
DRDO (defence
research and development organisation) headed by Dr.Abdul Kalam and his deputy
K.Santhanam, had not only provided the
logistics for the explosion, but deceived the American hawk-eye satellites. This particular feat of
DRDO, especially making the Americans red-faced, was greatly relished by media ,
and the limelight was on DRDO heroes. K.Santhanam was media savvy and was
prepared to walk where angels feared to tread.
AEC and DRDO Roles: Dr.Chidambaran,
had
shown me how his team had successfully developed the computer model of the
device and had succeeded in conducting the test
and it only needed to be physically tested for materialising a bomb. The DRDO
and defence personnel had played a critical role by planting the nuclear device
in abandoned wells in Pokharan desert and
laying in the darkness of night miles of wire for
connecting it to the station where the
trigger was located, and their nocturnal
labour had avoided the American
spy satellites. But the actual assembly of the device, according to nuclear
establishment, was the result of their expertise.
![]() |
| Vajpayee at Pokhran site |
When the first
nuclear test was carried out on Buddha Purnima, in May 1974, the goal was to
move towards a nuclear weapon. The
nuclear establishment was, however, ready for carrying out a test
for weaponisation long before 1998 as Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR)
had initiated nuclear research way back in 1944 under Homi Bhabh’s leadership. In
fact, prime minister Narasimha Rao had also given the go ahead at the fag-end of 1995 for such a test but
could not carry it out ,as his decision
had leaked out to the US that pressurised him to abandon it.
Media Visit to Pokharan: PM
Vajpayijee, accompanied by the leaders of Atomic Energy commission and DRDO, visited the blast site at Pokharan and I had taken a C-130
Hercules plane load of Indian and foreign media for coverage. I had specific instructions
to ensure that Dr.Chidambaram and Dr.Kakodkar received sufficient
visual media exposure. As the media was hungry for details about the way India
had managed the blast , it was decided to arrange a few days later a joint press conference to be addressed by Dr. Chidambaram
and Dr. Kakodkar on the one side and Dr.Kalam and K. Santhanam from DRDO on the
other.
No,Nos for Press Conference: A little before the scheduled press conference, principal secretary
to PM Brajesh Misra called me for a meeting and gave me a detailed briefing of what
the media interaction should not deal with and instructed me to ensure that
both the sides confine themselves to the technical details of the
latest blast, and should not stray into any nuclear weapon policy issues or
ongoing diplomatic stand -off with the US. Another No-No was the
nuclear arms race in the sub-continent. Paksitan had not yet conducted its own
nuclear test in response to the Indian success. He also
asked me to ensure that the nuclear establishment had plenty of opportunity to speak.
There was some
apprehension that Dr.Kalam, who was associated with the
development of missiles (weapon delivery systems), might be trapped by media into
answering questions about nuclear weaponisation and their delivery
vehicles. Post-Pokharan, India had already declared a moratorium on further
testing of nuclear devices and had declared ‘No-first use’ of nuclear weapon. The bomb was meant as a deterrent and
primarily for defence purposes. A tricky issue thrown up into media space by
both the defence minister George Fernandez and Pramod Mahajan, soon after
the blast, was that the Indian nuclear bomb was aimed at China and this had
created considerable embarrassment to the government.
I was told to
skip such questions. On instructions from Misra, I met both Dr.Chidambaram and
Dr.Kalam and without disclosing the instructions I had received, I discussed
the broad framework of the press conference and requested them to allow me to
intervene whenever there were any political questions.
Pak Bomb News amidst Press Conference: There must have been more than 400 media persons from
India and broad, with dozens of TV teams present at the press conference, and
almost everyone wanted to shoot questions from the word go. I had the privilege
of sitting between the two teams of eminent scientists of DRDO and the nuclear
establishment and broadly set the rules for the media
persons, emphasising that the eminent scientists were available to answer
questions solely about the technical aspects of the blast.
The press
conference was proceeding smoothly and had reached the half-way mark. I had
managed to ensure that the questions were
equally thrown at both the teams. As could be expected, the media was
not so much interested in the technical details but was pressing hard to get
answers for political aspects, like how
India was likely to cope with the US sanctions,
future of the nuclear programme such as
weaponisation and the
development of delivery vehicles, China vs India, India vs Pak-arising out of
India becoming a nuclear armed power. I had to delicately move the deliberations
away from what then seemed to be strategic and
diplomatic mine-fields.
Even as we were
busy in responding to the volley of questions amidst the din, my able assistant Ravichandran, rushed into the press conference hall and
pressed a chit into my hand and whispered that the principal secretary to PM
was calling me on the secret phone (RAX) in
my room and was insistent that I speak to him urgently. I was in great
dilemma because I did not want to leave the room, lest some unwelcome
question on tricky diplomatic issues crop up: nor could I not attend an urgent
phone call from the brain behind the nuclear test.
I managed to excuse
myself and went to the phone. Brajesh Misra, at the other end spoke in a hushed
voice : “Narendra, Pakisitan has exploded
the bomb. Please tell this to Dr.Kalam
and Chidambaram. Later let me know how the press conference went “. I returned
to the press conference, apologised to the media for leaving the room but did
not tell the eminent scientists about the call I had just received. I did not
want the focus of our press conference to be diverted.
Meanwhile, the
senior foreign service officer, Hardeep Puri (who retired as India’s permanent
representative to the UN in 2013) entered the
conference room and passed on a message about the explosion conducted by Paksitan and
expected me to announce it. When I did not show any reaction, he prompted a
media person to ask : “Have you any news about Pakistan conducting a test’?
I intervened:
“This press conference is about the Indian nuclear explosion. If Paksitan has
exploded one, they will announce it”. And the press conference continued.
OMG point and RAW info: Again,
my assistant, Ravichandran appeared in the conference hall and whispered into
my ears: “Sir, the principal secretary is on the line. Insists that you speak
to him and he is not disconnecting the line.” Displaying a fake smile
to the media, I excused myself and went to the phone. Misraji: “Narendra, have you told Dr.Kalam and Chidambaram about the Pakistani bomb” With some timidity, I told him: “No, Sir.
Why should we announce the Pak bomb in our press conference’?”
![]() |
| Narendra - The author |
I later learnt
from Misra that someone in RAW had misread earthquake tremors in Pak region and
reported it as a nuclear blast. Don’t blame RAW, because instrument
s like seismograph do not make any distinction between different kinds
of tremors. Around that time, Pak was expected to respond in haste to India’s
explosion.
Actually, Pak
nuclear test took place on May 28th, several days after our press
conference!
(This is the 4th in a series of exclusives to PRapport by S Narendra, former spokesperson of the Govt of India and ex-adviser to Prime Ministers)
Wednesday, 6 May 2015
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Tuesday, 5 May 2015
Social Connect - beyond routine PR or CSR
By Tamanna Khanna,
Head - Marketing, IndiaFirst Life Insurance
A PRapport Special
Every brand has a philosophy. Some purpose
and some values that it lives by. This
philosophy of a brand goes way beyond its product or service alone. It goes
beyond to reach out to the society it works in and connect with it.
At IndiaFirst, we believe in the philosophy
of making life easier and spreading smiles. Our products, services, processes -
are built on the same foundation, where we strive to simplify insurance (our
business) as much as we can, securing numerous lives in the process. However,
we do realize, we cannot at the same time ignore the core in which we exist –
the society that impacts all our lives.
Whether a consumer is an existing customer or
a potential one who may or may not drive our business, but reaching out to him
and developing a relationship, or at least some sort of a connect with him
becomes essential for every brand. And
this is where social issues/ causes help in building bridges.
![]() |
| Tamanna |
Possibly, social causes are just a way for
the brand to ensure that it’s living up to its core philosophy, its belief and
its ethos. Experience is that taking up
social responsibilities or causes provides tangible benefits along with lasting
competitive advantages to organizations. For instance, when Tata Tea talks to
its consumers through a Jaago Re campaign, it attempts to make a difference in
its consumer’s day-to-day life. It wants to imprint the brand’s standout image
in the consumer’s mindset and stay on the top of their recall when any similar
social, civilian issues rise up. Does this mean that every person who connects
with the brand and its philosophy buys Tata Tea? Not necessarily. But the cause that the brand
supports, adds up to the brand recall value and you cannot miss Tata Tea on the
shelves. And this, in turn, also increases a possibility of you eventually
turning into a Tata Tea consumer.
A social cause is not meant to be looked at
as just a Corporate Social Responsibility initiative driven by the company. It
is rather marketing and customer engagement at its very best – which needs the
entire organization to get involved in. As a business model, it forms a base
for the company’s market value, operational efficiency, as well as a boost to
brand value.
Contributing to the society that we live in
may not have a direct relation to the business graphs but they strategically drive
consumer minds towards the brands as they build a compelling story that binds
the brand to the consumer – building a unique relationship and rapport.
It obviously makes sense to create a business
model that weaves explicit goals for profit, environmental performance, and
social efforts along with meeting the brand’s core philosophy. At the same
time, all of this needs to yield long-term business goals rather than focusing
on the short-term business benefits.
One such attempt was IndiaFirst Life Insurance
‘Happy India’ initiative that aims to nurture the
attitude of working towards constructive change and creating change among the
school going children in the age bracket of 11-16 years. Happy
India is an effort to provide children a chance to not just demand
change but actually ‘create’ it, by supporting them in implementing their ‘Ideas for Change’.
| School children in an education exercise - part of Happy India project |
Irrespective of the 2% provision for CSR as
per the new Companies Act, our firm belief is that brands need to remember that building a sustainable
business requires connecting with the society it lives in (and making profits)
to go hand in hand. It is essential for
them to study and chalk out social and environmental strategies that will be
driven by the brand purpose while keeping the motive genuine. More than being a
marketing activity or any sort of publicity buff, the initiative fundamentally
needs to be embedded in the company’s core values and purpose and make a
difference.
Any initiative to be successful needs to add
value not only to its stakeholders which include its customers, employees, the
business community, but also bring in some economic, social, environmental
value to its core business functions.
Crack this model, and you can have loyal
customers for life!
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