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Dainik Jagran

Dainik Jagran (Hi:दैनिक जागरन || lit. transl. Daily awakening) is an Indian Hindi language daily newspaper.[2]

Dainik Jagran
Front page, 28 March 2010
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Jagran Prakashan Limited
Founded1942; 81 years ago (1942)
LanguageHindi
HeadquartersKanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India
CountryIndia
Circulation34 lakh (3.4 million) daily[1] (as of July–December 2018)
OCLC number416871022
Websitejagran.com

It was ranked 5th in the world and 2nd in India by circulation in 2016.[3] In 2019 Quarter 4, according to Indian Readership Survey, Dainik Jagran reported a total readership of 6.86 crore (68.6 million) and was the top publication.[4] It is owned by Jagran Prakashan Limited,[5] a publishing house listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange of India.

History

Origins

Dainik Jagran was established in Jhansi,[6] a district town in United Provinces (later renamed Uttar Pradesh),[7] by Puranchand Gupta and first published in 1942. Prior to this, Gupta was worked as the managing editor of a local magazine since 1939 and would frequently visit Bombay to secure advertisements to publish in the magazine, which gave him the required connections and confidence to start a daily newspaper. However, soon after its establishment, the newspaper suspended its publication during the Quit India Movement.[6]

In 1946, Gupta decided that Dainik Jagran should be launched in the city of Lucknow, which was the capital of United Provinces. In preparation for the launch, he acquired a building on rent and sent machinery to be set up there but soon learned that the newspapers National Herald and Pioneer were in the midst of launching their first Hindi language editions Navjeevan and Swatantra Bharat in the same city. It prompted Gupta to quickly change his plans with the decision to launch the newspaper in Kanpur instead. The machinery was diverted to Kanpur, new premises rented out and the newspaper launched on 21 September 1947.[6]

Dainik Jagran reflecting the beliefs of its founder,[6] took a right wing pro-Hindutva line from its inception.[6][8]

Early history

The newspaper faced with financial problems in the beginning and Gupta had to borrow from his family to keep it running. He took to cutting down on editorial costs by relying on syndicates which offered articles at cheaper rates and by getting free article submissions from political players and activists who were hungry for publicity. He was on constant visits to metropolitan cities to sell advertisement space on the newspaper, and hired reporters on a part-time basis during his visits for newsgathering in those cities.[6] P. D. Gupta who was the younger brother of Puranchand launched two editions of the newspaper in Madhya Pradesh; the Rewa edition in 1953 and the Bhopal edition in 1956.[9]

By the mid-1950s, Gupta had started making pitches for advertisements and advertising the Dainik Jagran itself.[6][10] In the 1956 edition of The Indian Press Year Book, the newspaper was advertised as The Daily Jagran and claimed to have a circulation of 21,000 copies covering Uttar Pradesh and Vindhya Pradesh. Gupta registered the newspaper at the Registrar of Newspapers for India, joined the industry body Audit Bureau of Circulation and joined the publisher's club Indian and Eastern Newspaper Society (IENS) where he became an executive member by 1960.[6] He also inducted his six sons into the newspaper's management while they were still in school.[11]

Conflict with Aj and Emergency

In 1975, Dainik Jagran launched its Gorakhpur edition which brought it into direct conflict with the newspaper Aj.[9][11] The Kanpur edition, run by Puranchand Gupta was covering four neighbouring districts from the city and had reached a limit where it could no longer increase its circulation in the regional market.[9]

The newspaper had become financially secure and had liquid funds at hand, that led Gupta's sons to encourage him to look into expansion. They had thought of Gorakhpur as the first place to go as it did have a local newspaper or a newspaper edition that was based in the city at that time. Gorakhpur was instead being covered by the Varanasi-based Aj and the city lay within its circulation area. Aj itself had a monetary surplus and its editor Vinod Shukla was looking to expand the newspaper as he predicted that a single edition newspaper in Uttar Pradesh would become unviable in the long term.[9] Shukla who had visited Kanpur in 1974 found Jagran to have carried very substandard content and expected an expansion attempt in the city to be easy.[9][11] The paper had brought out printing machines for Kanpur in December and responded almost immediately after Jagran's Gorakhpur launch by launching its own Kanpur edition in April 1975.[11]

The Kanpur edition of Aj had launched only two months before the imposition of Emergency rule and subsequent press censorship.[12] Shivprasad Gupta, the owner of Aj was unsure about the expansion but Shukla supported by Gupta's son used the period as an opportunity to consolidate the newspaper.[9] The Emergency created a demand for critical journalism which the newspaper provided and enabled it to make inroads in Jagran's market share. On the streets of Kanpur, fights broke out between men hired by the two newspapers who used weapons such as batons and improvised firearms against each other for control over offices, territory and distribution.[12]

In midst of the conflict hawkers gained significant influence over the newspapers; initially Aj was charged a commission rate of 20% while Jagran was charged 30%, but the hawkers forced the former to increase its rate over the latter, marking the beginning of a period of fierce negotiations over commission rates and recurrent increases in the rates for both newspapers. Eventually the conflict ended when the two newspapers decided to join hands against the hawkers and pushed the commission rate back down to a fixed 30%.[13]

During the Emergency, the circulation of Hindi newspapers rose significantly as a result of increased political consciousness and by 1977, the number of newspapers that were selling more 100,000 copies had risen to over 10 from a figure three before its imposition. Dainik Jagran and Aj were both among the new newspapers to join the 100,000+ club.[14] The period had transformed the newspaper industry and regional language papers including that of Hindi became the face of the rapidly changing industry that would be transformed into mass media over the course of the following decades.[12][14] Government policy was changed as well which facilitated the growth of the industry.[12]

Expansion in Uttar Pradesh

 
 
Jhansi (1942)
 
Kanpur (1947)
 
Gorakhpur (1975)
 
Lucknow (1979)
 
Varanasi (1981)
 
Meerut (1984)
 
Agra (1986)
 
Bareilly (1989)
class=notpageimage|
Editions of Dainik Jagran in Uttar Pradesh as of 1990.

The launch of Jagran's Gorakhpur edition marked the beginning of the newspaper's own period of rapid expansion. In 1979, the newspaper launched two editions in Lucknow and Allahabad.[9] Vinod Shukla was hired to oversee the Lucknow edition and help them force its way into the Lucknow market, where the newspaper faced intense competition and pressures from trade unions.[11] The Allahabad edition was shifted to Varanasi in 1981. The newspaper then entered the circulation area of Amar Ujala, launching a Meerut edition in 1984, an Agra edition in 1986 and a Bareilly edition in 1989.[9] In 1989–90, Navbharat Times which dominated the circulation in Lucknow discontinued all its editions except the Bombay and Delhi editions after being hit by an eight month long shut-down in the cities of Lucknow and Patna. The discontinuation allowed Jagran to rapidly increase its circulation in the Lucknow region with minimal hindrance.[15]

Anti–Reservation stir and Communalism

The owners of the mainstream Hindi newspapers came from upper caste families,[8] and had mercantile urban backgrounds. The Gupta family that owned the Dainik Jagran was one them. They social background of the owners formed the core base of support for the Jan Sangh and its successor the Bharatiya Janata Party.[16] The reporters of these newspapers were generally given clear instructions by owners and their editors to toe a particular line in their reports.[17] The announcement from the V. P. Singh government on implementation of reservations for backward castes on the basis the Mandal Commission recommendations around 1990 became the impetus for many of these newspapers to promote Hindutva propaganda.[14]

Uttar Pradesh between 1989 and 1992 had severe communal tension as a consequence of the Ram Janmabhoomi movement,[18] which also made espousing Hindutva profitable as communal reportage generated greater circulation and advertisement revenue. The kind of reportage was further spurred on by direct financial and social support from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, Vishwa Hindu Parishad and other Hindutva organisations.[14] Dainik Jagran in particular used the situation as an opportunity and took advantage of it by pandering to communal sentiments. It would establish itself as the dominant newspaper in the state during this period.[18]

The newspaper adopted an openly pro-Bharatiya Janata Party and pro-Vishwa Hindu Parishad line, helped disseminate Hindutva opinions and presented heavily skewed as well as falsified accounts of the opposition to the Ram Janmabhoomi movement,[19] while taking an heavily adversarial stance towards the parallel emergence of backwards caste and Dalit movements.[8] During the Ram Rath Yatra, Jagran strongly endorsed the movement and began asking readers through news reports and editorials to take a stand.[19] Between late November and early December 1992, the weeks leading up to the demolition of the Babri Masjid, the newspaper would regularly dedicate eight columns on the front page to the Ayodhya–Ram Janmabhoomi episode. The sustained coverage is considered to be unprecedented in the history of print and electronic media. According to an insider at Jagran newsrooms, the bias was so conspicuous that the staff chanted "Jai Shri Ram" when the mosque was brought down.[17]

 
Stamp issued in 2003, depicting Narendra Mohan.

Narendra Mohan, the Chairman of the Jagran Prakashan would get elected to the Rajya Sabha through a nomination from the Bharatiya Janata Party.[8] In Ranchi, a complaint was filed at the Press Council of India against Aj and Jagran by a local editor for instigating communalism.[20] The animosity towards lower castes culminated into an incident known as the Halla Bol in 1994 where the offices of the Jagran and those of Amar Ujala faced widespread attacks from followers of Mulayam Singh Yadav.[8] The Press Council would eventually rebuke Jagran among several other newspapers for instigating mass hysteria and provoking communal hatred through rumours, exaggeration, doctored pictures, fabricated figures and other distortions.[21] Mohan would some years later instruct his editorial staff to tone down its coverage so that it wouldn't be seen as a substitute to Panchajanya, the official Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh magazine.[20]

Mayawati daughter story (1995)

In December 1995, Dainik Jagran published a story with the claim that Mayawati, the leader of the Bahujan Samaj Party, had an illegitimate 12-year-old daughter.[22] Published at the bottom of the first page in a short two column section, the story included claims that her daughter was hidden away in New Delhi and was borne out of a former "love marriage", based on an interview with a disgrunted member of the party.[23] The newspaper went to the extent of calling Mayawati a "chamarin", a derogatory slur used for Dalit women.[22]

Despite the story having been given less importance by the newspaper, it created a sensation as having an illegitimate child was a serious accusation for an unmarried woman and a question of virtue. In addition, Mayawati maintained a public image that she had denied herself family and children to fulfill the objectives of the Self-Respect Movement which sought equality for lower castes.[23] The story caused resentment among Dalits and the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) which mainly drew support from them described it as the latest example of a Brahmin dominated press and establishment's constant mudslinging against lower castes.[24][a] In Lucknow, supporters of the party demonstrated around the office of the newspaper, blockading it for a day. There were reports of violence during the protest and the author who wrote the piece was threatened.[23]

The story also faced criticism from journalists and commentators. It was condemned as sensationalist journalism that was engaging in gossip about the private life of a female politician and disparaging her. The criticism was accompanied by questions on Dainik Jagran's ambitions of becoming a serious national newspaper and charges of the newspaper lacking journalistic ethics, professionalism and credibility.[23][24] Some of the prominent critics included the chairman of the Press Council, Judge P. B. Sawant and the editor-in-chief of Jansatta, Prabash Joshi.[26] K. Vikram Rao, the national chairman of a major journalist's union suggested that a more rigorous system was required, that a specialised training in journalism should be needed before a person could be employed by a newspaper and that the Press Council should have stronger tools for penalising journalists.[27]

Staff at the newspaper strongly rejected the charges against the newspaper though they were apologetic about the story.[23] Vinod Shukla, who was the resident editor in Lucknow was infuriated by the criticism, particularly that from Joshi and dismissed it as jealously during his editorial meetings.[28] Narendra Mohan who was the owner and editor-in-chief of the newspapers at the time, responded to the criticism with an editorial. In the newspaper's defense, he stated that the newspaper itself was against this kind of journalism and he regretted that the story had been published but alleged that the fault lay on western norms influencing Indian journalism and on Mayawati herself who according to him used "ugly language" and was part of a trend where Indian politics had become unethical which had led to the situation.[29]

In response to the protest by BSP supporters, journalists who were supportive of newspaper held their own protest against the party describing it to be in defense of press freedom. It was reported that several newspapers were going to boycott the party's campaign during the upcoming assembly election though the boycott was only upheld by Dainik Jagran.[23] Some commentators noted that while journalists had frequently faced violence, generally from Hindutva groups, such an instance leading to a boycott was unique and had resulted from the only instance in which a newspaper had faced attacks from a Dalit group.[29]

Later expansions

The Delhi edition of the Daink Jagran was launched in 1990. According to the then Chairman of Jagran Prakashan, Yogendra Mohan Gupta, his executives had advised him that in order to make Jagran a national newspaper, they had to launch an edition in Delhi.[9] From the 1990s onwards, established Hindi language newspapers such as the Dainik Jagran, Dainik Bhaskar and Amar Ujala went on a multi edition expansion beyond their home states.[30][31][32] The newspapers had a new generation of foreign educated heirs, generally sons or nephews of the older owners who unlike their predecessors took active interest in expansions, capital acquisition and partnerships.[33] For Jagran, it was the second and third generation of the proprietors who charted the expansion and localisation strategy of the newspaper.[34]

The expanding newspapers were motivated by the prospects of revenues that could be obtained by offering increased overall readership figures to advertisers.[30] They copied the strategy that was devised by Samir Jain's The Times of India, a newspaper that had become extremely profitable by increasing marketing efforts, introducing colored newspapers while lowering cover prices that starting price wars and led to increase in circulation which in turn brought in high revenues from advertisements.[31] Dainik Jagran also adopted a mass media content strategy of localisation through trivia laden local news,[35] and employed local part time stringers for its newsgathering operations.[36] The expansion efforts by the established newspapers led to increased localisation of news content across the Hindi belt but severely harmed stand-alone local newspapers who were unable to compete against them in terms of production or offers to advertisers.[30] The changes however did not bring about any improvements in the working conditions, job security and professional autonomy of reporters. Most of them were kept as part timers and those who were granted regular positions were retained on a "hire-and-fire" basis. In 1992, Jagran had only 55 full time staff correspondents and 300 "working journalists" in a total staff strength of 700, the rest being stringers, regional correspondents, etc.[37]

Jagran launched its Aligarh edition in 1993, the Dehradun edition in 1997 and the Jalandhar edition in 1999.[9] In 1995, its circulation exceeded 0.5 million and the newspaper was being published from 12 locations across Uttar Pradesh and in New Delhi.[38] In 1998, the newspaper received a competitive boost when the Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee gave an exclusive interview for it in midst of the Kargil War. The interview was later seen as an act of political patronage towards a newspaper that had remained loyal to Vajpayee and his Bharatiya Janata Party.[39] In the National Readership Survey of 1999, Dainik Jagran was seen to have become the first Hindi language newspaper to feature in the top 5 newspapers in terms of readership, at a time when newspapers from southern India dominated the readership figures.[40]

The launch of the Jalandhar edition in Punjab in 1999 was the first of a series of editions outside Uttar Pradesh and is described to have been the beginning of its real expansion.[32] In 2000, the Dainik Jagran launched three editions in Hissar, Patna and Allahabad, and in the following year it launched an edition in Moradabad.[9] In Patna, the capital of Bihar, the newspaper focused on crime stories and prioritised presenting the law and order situation in a negative light to its readers.[41] When Uttaranchal became a state with Dehradun as its capital, Dainik Jagran’s circulation experienced a fourfold growth in the new state due to the increased commercial importance of the state's capital.[42] In February 2003, the newspaper launched 3 editions in Jharkhand in the cities of Ranchi, Jamshedpur and Dhanbad. It was aggressively marketed and publicised but was unable to make a significant impact as Prabhat Khabar dominated the market in the state.[43] Dainik Jagran launched editions in Bhagalpur and Panipat in the same year, two more editions in the cities of Ludhiana and Nainital in 2004 and then the Muzaffarpur, Dharamshala and Jammu editions in 2005.[9]

In Punjab, the newspaper faced competition from the likes of Dainik Bhaskar, Amar Ujala and Hindustan, all of which expanded aggressively in the state. The rapid expansion by the 4 newspapers broke down the dominance of Punjab Kesari by 2005.[44] In the meantime, commercial interests in the wake of the rapid rise of Hindi newspaper readership compelled the mainstream Hindi newspapers to moderate their adversarial stance towards backward and scheduled caste leaders. By 2006, the upper caste Chairman of Jagran Prakashan, Mahendra Mohan Gupta was vying for and received a Rajya Sabha nomination from the Samajwadi (Socialist) Party which was led by the backward-caste Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Mulayam Singh Yadav who had also been an old adversary for the newspaper.[8]

From 2004 onwards, Dainik Jagran had emerged as the newspaper with the largest readership, having displaced Dainik Bhaskar that had occupied the position since 2002.[45] The two newspapers had maintained a tacit understanding since the beginning of their out of state expansion drives in the mid-1990s, that they would not encroach upon each other's territories. As a consequence, Jagran had not launched a new edition in Madhya Pradesh or Chhattisgarh while Bhaskar had not launched any editions in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar or Jharkhand.[32] In the state of Madhya Pradesh, those who were subscribed to Dainik Jagran were primarily migrants who had come from Utter Pradesh and wanted news from their native region.[46] In 2006, the understanding between the two was broken by Jagran when the newspapers launched its Indore edition which marked the beginning of a period intense rivalry between the two. The new edition was unsuccessful in making in-roads in the market, unable to compete against the Indore edition of Dainik Bhaskar as well as the newspaper Nai Duniya that was based in the same city, while Bhaskar went on to launch its own edition in Jagran's territory.[32][b][c]

On 8 July 2006, Dainik Jagran also launched its Siliguri edition, just two days after the Nathu La mountain pass was opened with the expectation that the city would become a major commercial centre. The launch added to the intensification of competition in the region which lay beyond the Hindi belt and already had editions of the two Hindi newspapers, namely Prabhat Khabar and Rajasthan Patrika, the former of which was launched only a few months ago in March.[47]

Government advertisements and shrinking readership

From the onset of Narendra Modi's tenure as the Prime Minister of India, government spending on advertisements in Dainik Jagran saw a sharp increase with exorbitant spending on regular advertisements. Between 2014–15 and 2018–19, the revenues generated solely from government advertisements of the Central Government was reported to have increased to over 100 crore (US$13 million).[48] The advertisement spending included political promotions and advertisements disguised as news items.[48][49] In one instance, five full-page advertisements were published in the newspaper in the period between 25 and 27 May 2015 celebrating the one year anniversary of Modi government.[50]

In one financial year, FY2017–18, the newspaper received 36.4 crore (US$4.6 million) in ad revenue from the Central Government which was more than the combined ad revenue of 33.2 crore (US$4.2 million) that the paper had received between 2010 and 2013, covering three financial years before Modi had come to power. Jagran's sister publications such as Mid-Day and Inquilab experienced similar increases in revenue from government advertisements. The advertisement spending by state governments of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, particularly the Uttar Pradesh Government whose advertisements regularly featured in the newspaper was not disclosed upon Right to Information (RTI) requests.[48] The government also inducted Sanjay Gupta, the editor-in-chief of the newspaper into the board of Prasar Bharati, India's public broadcaster in 2020.[51]

Per the Indian Readership Survey in 2019, Dainik Jagran's average issue readership fell by 17% from a figure of 20.3 million to 16.9 million. In Uttar Pradesh which stood as its biggest market, the readership fell from 12 million to 9.97 million while in the state of Bihar, it fell from 3.41 million to 2.97 million. The fall in readership was part of a general trend of fall in newspaper readership due to economic slowdown, only 3 out of the 10 newspapers with the largest readership did not experience a fall. One of them was its rival, Dainik Bhaskar which came close to displacing Jagran's position as the newspaper with the largest readership. Its readership had increased from 15.4 to 15.6 million with gains in Bihar. According to media watchdog Newslaundry, the Dainik Jagran was suffering from "falling credibility in a politically polluted atmosphere" among other issues.[52]

Majithia Board recommendations

Coronavirus pandemic and aftermath

On 22 March 2020, the COVID-19 lockdown in India was announced and it heavily impacted news publishers who were already strained due to the emergence of other forms of news media that had splintered audiences and due to the economic slowdown caused by demonitisation and GST. R. K. Agarwal, the CFO of Jagran Prakashan described the situation as a nightmare. Dainik Jagran adopted across the board cost cutting measures; the newspapers halved the number of pages and consolidated printing. It also started raising its cover prices whenever it could which Agarwal claimed was done to recover lost advertisement revenue.[53]

In its pandemic reportage, the newspaper promoted conspiracy theories against Muslims and extensively publicised the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh including through the publication of various articles authored by its senior leaders.[54] The overall coverage lacked transparency, journalistic ethics, accuracy and factual reporting.[55] The reportage prioritised stories on Tablighi Jamaat publishing 230 of them on its frontpage including 120 above the fold and blamed Muslims for the pandemic.[54] The newspaper created a narrative that the government was well prepared and had brought the pandemic under control but simultaneously presented the idea that Muslims were intentionally spreading the virus which had led to the nation losing the "battle against coronavirus". Muslims were dehumanised as the "nation's enemies" and depicted as uncivilised violent people who attacked healthcare professionals and violated lockdown measures.[56]

Dainik Jagran's coverage largely ignored and distracted from issues such as the mass exodus of migrant workers, low testing rates, the lack of PPE kits and ventilators in hospitals and general mismanagement by the government. It instead condemned opposition parties that criticised the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government's management and accused them of spreading "negativity" at a time when the government was dealing with a "war-like situation". The newspaper itself criticised measures taken by state governments with an opposition party or coalition in power while praising similar measures taken in Bharatiya Janata Party ruled states.[56]

Mass burials story (2021)

During second wave of the pandemic, national news publishers such as Dainik Bhaskar, India Today magazine and Mojo Story, and international ones such as Reuters and BBC had published reports and images of mass burials on the banks of the river Ganga and bodies floating all across the river caused by people's inability to afford crematoriums that were severely overburdened from Coronavirus related deaths.[57]

On 23 May 2021, Dainik Jagran published a frontpage story that claimed that the mass burials were normal, that no increase in deaths had occurred and that those who were buried had died of leprosy and snake bites, dismissing the reports from other news publishers as mere sensationalism. The story included a comparison of a recent image with an image that it claimed was taken three years ago from a mass burial at the Shringverpur ghat in Prayagraj and on its basis falsely stated that most images of mass burials at the ghat were taken before the pandemic. According to the news piece, Jagran had employed a five-man team who made finding after covering over a dozen villages along a 70 km stretch on the Ganga, which included the Phaphamau and Shringverpur ghats. The story was highlighted by BJP politicians including the Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and then followed by a series of reports from the newspaper between late May to early June that attempted to reinforce the same idea. The newspaper before publishing the 23 May piece had previously published news reports which contradictorily stated that there was an increase in mass burials and coronavirus related deaths.[57]

In June, a journalistic investigation was conducted into the claims made by Dainik Jagran that found their claims did not match ground realities and noted that the newspaper was known to have been receiving large revenues through government advertisements and disguising them as news. The investigation could not verify the age of the old image but it was found that the image was taken at a different location. Independent journalist Prashant Singh conducted several interviews with pandits, pandas (household priests), gravediggers and other locals at the two ghats who all confirmed that while some burials had always occurred, they had never seen such a large scale increase in their numbers before the pandemic.[57] The investigative report was published by the fact checking organisation Alt News,[58][59] which was supported by Prayagraj-based photojournalist Prabhat Kumar Verma, Aaj Tak reporter Shivendra Srivastav who had covered Phaphamau ghat and government data related to local management. Alt News contacted reporters at Dainik Jagran's Prayaraj edition who refused to comment on the story but two of them confirmed that there was an unprecedented increase in the number of mass burials.[57]

In response to the Alt News report, Dainik Jagran filed a defamation case against the organisation claiming that the report had made disparging remarks about the newspaper and forwarded a plea that the report should be suppressed for the duration of the case. On 1 November 2021, the Delhi High Court squashed the plea stating that there was "no reason to intervene and stifle free speech", noting the interviews that the report was based on and stated the report was within the ambit of public interest.[60][61]

Organisation

Sanjay Gupta is the chief executive officer and editor-in-chief of the newspaper.[62] Since 2020, he has also been appointed by the Modi government to the board of Prasar Bharati, India's public broadcaster.[51]

The news staff consists of a large number of local stringer informants who obtain news items from small towns and villages, for the newspaper's sub-edition pages containing district specific news. The stringers generally do not have qualifications in journalism.[63]

Content

Dainik Jagran was first named in a 2010 report to the Press Council of India as one of the newspapers publishing undisclosed paid news for celebrities, politicians and companies.[64]

The newspaper publishes advertisements disguised as news reports for the Yogi Adityanath government. The advertisements copy the newspaper's general news report style and are usually published on the front pages. They are sometimes accompanied with bylines to Dainik Jagran's staff, some of whom have been identified to be members of the newspaper's marketing team.[49] The contents of the advertorial advertisements include laudatory reports of the government's activities, quotes from apparent residents praising the government and statements made by Bharatiya Janata Party politicians presented as facts without any attribution. Several of the newspaper's own news reports were repurposed into government advertisements at a later date and presented as new stories, which according to media analyst Vineet Kumar brings into question the credibility of its general reportage as well. Some of the advertorial reports have been found to be duplicates of reports which were earlier published as news items by outlets such as Zee News and the newspaper Uday Bhoomi.[48][49]

Editorial stance

Dainik Jagran is a right-wing newspaper,[8][51] that espouses the Hindutva ideology.[8][65] The newspaper has never openly admitted to any leanings and claims that it is neutral in its political orientation.[39]

The newspaper has consistently espoused a nativist rhetoric of identity politics for the construction of a temple dedicated to Rāma at the site believed to be Ram Janmabhoomi (transl. Birthplace of Rama) through its opinion-editorials and in editorialised news reports.[66]

Criticism

Dainik Jagran observed silence over Delhi violence and was accused of suppressing the incident.[67]

Dainik Jagran is also accused of running false narratives in support of the BJP government. It ran a news covering Hathras gangrape and murder incident declaring it as a false case of rape and tried to defend the rapists which were later refuted by the CBI when it said that gangrape did occur and the state tried to do a cover-up.[68]

Dainik Jagran is accused of running smear campaigns against Indian mathematician and educationalist, Anand Kumar printing false news about his institution called Super 30.[69]

Dainik Jagran demonised and ran a smear campaign against activist Afreen Fatima when UP officials demolished her house, including claiming that she expressed her support for terrorist Afzal Guru.[70]

Dainik Jagran trademark dispute

The trademark name "Dainik Jagran" is the subject of an ongoing civil lawsuit initiated by the G. D. Gupta family against Jagran Prakashan in 2007 . The G. D. Gupta family are the controlling shareholders of Jagran Publications Pvt. Ltd., an associate company which publishes the Rewa and Bhopal editions.[71] According to the lawsuit, the P. C. Gupta family controlled Jagran Prakashan is making unauthorised use of the trademark name and has laid a false claim of exclusive rights over it. On the basis of a family partition dating back to 12 June 1951 and an additional agreement signed on 10 January 1976, the lawsuit states that the trademark name is jointly owned by the lineal descendants of the three brothers, namely J. C. Arya, G. D. Gupta and P. C. Gupta, and not solely by the P. C. Gupta family. The J. C. Arya family own the associate company Dainik Jagran LLP which publishes the Jhansi edition of the newspaper.[62]

The lawsuit was started by Madan Mohan Gupta backed by several other members of the family and they applied for an injunction seeking an interim restraining order over the use of the trademark name. In 2010, Sanjeev Mohan Gupta, the director of Jagran Publications Pvt. Ltd., also appealed to the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) seeking rejection of Jagran Prakashan's holding company transferring shares to Blackstone Group that was planning on investing in the company.[62] S. M. Gupta stated that the unauthorised transfer of shares without consultation with the associate companies adversely affected them and would lead to brand dilution, adding that while the case was being litigated at the High Court of Delhi, the transfer would create third party interests in it.[71]

Jagran Prakashan rejected all claims made by the lawsuit, contesting that the two agreements had any impact over the rights and reiterated its claim of exclusive rights on the trademark name. Responding to the appeal at FIPB, the company contested that the transfer of shares related to a different entity and did not concern the subject matter of the litigation.[71] In light of the fact that 35 out of the 39 editions of Dainik Jagran are registered under Jagran Prakashan, the court did not find sufficient grounds for an interim restraining order on the use of the trademark name. The company has also been allowed to go ahead with its transfer of shares and others mergers and acquisitions while the case continues to be litigated in court.[62]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dainik Jagran's story on Mayawati also revived earlier rumours that she had been in an illicit long term relationship with the founder Kanshi Ram, which contributed to the general depiction of Dalits as immoral people.[25]
  2. ^ Jagran Prakashan eventually bought out the Indore based Nai Duniya in 2012 to establish a presence in Madhya Pradesh.[32]
  3. ^ Dainik Bhaskar would respond to the launch of Dainik Jagran's Indore edition by launching its own editions in Ranchi, Jamshedpur, Dhanbad and Patna between 2010 and 2014.[32]

References

  1. ^ "Highest Circulated Daily Newspapers (language wise)" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  2. ^ Aneez, Z.; Chattapadhyay, S.; Parthasarathi, V.; Nielsen, R. K. (2016). Centre for Internet and Society. "Digital Transition of Newspapers in India: Dainik Jagran, Hindustan Times, and Malayala Manorama". Indian Newspapers' Digital Transition. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism – via University of Oxford.
  3. ^ "Details of most circulated publications for the audit period Jan – Jun 2016" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  4. ^ "INDIAN READERSHIP SURVEY 2019 Q4" (PDF). Indian Readership Survey.
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  69. ^ Amarnath Tewary (22 August 2018). "Bihar Super-30 founder faces smear campaign". The Hindu. from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2019. When asked who is behind all this, he quipped, "everyone knows in Patna who is he…why should I take his name?” Is he former DGP Abhyanand who was earlier associated with Super-30 for five years?, Mr. Kumar did not respond.
  70. ^ "Dainik Jagran plays judge, jury and executioner as UP officials raze Afreen Fatima's house". Newslaundry. 13 June 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
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External links

  • Official website (in Hindi)

Coordinates: 26°28′50″N 80°18′07″E / 26.48050°N 80.30200°E / 26.48050; 80.30200

dainik, jagran, गरन, transl, daily, awakening, indian, hindi, language, daily, newspaper, front, page, march, 2010typedaily, newspaperformatbroadsheetowner, jagran, prakashan, limitedfounded1942, years, 1942, languagehindiheadquarterskanpur, uttar, pradesh, in. Dainik Jagran Hi द न क ज गरन lit transl Daily awakening is an Indian Hindi language daily newspaper 2 Dainik JagranFront page 28 March 2010TypeDaily newspaperFormatBroadsheetOwner s Jagran Prakashan LimitedFounded1942 81 years ago 1942 LanguageHindiHeadquartersKanpur Uttar Pradesh IndiaCountryIndiaCirculation34 lakh 3 4 million daily 1 as of July December 2018 OCLC number416871022Websitejagran comMedia of IndiaList of newspapersIt was ranked 5th in the world and 2nd in India by circulation in 2016 3 In 2019 Quarter 4 according to Indian Readership Survey Dainik Jagran reported a total readership of 6 86 crore 68 6 million and was the top publication 4 It is owned by Jagran Prakashan Limited 5 a publishing house listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange of India Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Early history 1 2 1 Conflict with Aj and Emergency 1 3 Expansion in Uttar Pradesh 1 3 1 Anti Reservation stir and Communalism 1 3 2 Mayawati daughter story 1995 1 4 Later expansions 1 5 Government advertisements and shrinking readership 1 5 1 Majithia Board recommendations 1 6 Coronavirus pandemic and aftermath 1 6 1 Mass burials story 2021 2 Organisation 3 Content 3 1 Paid news 3 2 Editorial stance 3 3 Criticism 4 Dainik Jagran trademark dispute 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit Dainik Jagran was established in Jhansi 6 a district town in United Provinces later renamed Uttar Pradesh 7 by Puranchand Gupta and first published in 1942 Prior to this Gupta was worked as the managing editor of a local magazine since 1939 and would frequently visit Bombay to secure advertisements to publish in the magazine which gave him the required connections and confidence to start a daily newspaper However soon after its establishment the newspaper suspended its publication during the Quit India Movement 6 In 1946 Gupta decided that Dainik Jagran should be launched in the city of Lucknow which was the capital of United Provinces In preparation for the launch he acquired a building on rent and sent machinery to be set up there but soon learned that the newspapers National Herald and Pioneer were in the midst of launching their first Hindi language editions Navjeevan and Swatantra Bharat in the same city It prompted Gupta to quickly change his plans with the decision to launch the newspaper in Kanpur instead The machinery was diverted to Kanpur new premises rented out and the newspaper launched on 21 September 1947 6 Dainik Jagran reflecting the beliefs of its founder 6 took a right wing pro Hindutva line from its inception 6 8 Early history Edit The newspaper faced with financial problems in the beginning and Gupta had to borrow from his family to keep it running He took to cutting down on editorial costs by relying on syndicates which offered articles at cheaper rates and by getting free article submissions from political players and activists who were hungry for publicity He was on constant visits to metropolitan cities to sell advertisement space on the newspaper and hired reporters on a part time basis during his visits for newsgathering in those cities 6 P D Gupta who was the younger brother of Puranchand launched two editions of the newspaper in Madhya Pradesh the Rewa edition in 1953 and the Bhopal edition in 1956 9 By the mid 1950s Gupta had started making pitches for advertisements and advertising the Dainik Jagran itself 6 10 In the 1956 edition of The Indian Press Year Book the newspaper was advertised as The Daily Jagran and claimed to have a circulation of 21 000 copies covering Uttar Pradesh and Vindhya Pradesh Gupta registered the newspaper at the Registrar of Newspapers for India joined the industry body Audit Bureau of Circulation and joined the publisher s club Indian and Eastern Newspaper Society IENS where he became an executive member by 1960 6 He also inducted his six sons into the newspaper s management while they were still in school 11 Conflict with Aj and Emergency Edit In 1975 Dainik Jagran launched its Gorakhpur edition which brought it into direct conflict with the newspaper Aj 9 11 The Kanpur edition run by Puranchand Gupta was covering four neighbouring districts from the city and had reached a limit where it could no longer increase its circulation in the regional market 9 The newspaper had become financially secure and had liquid funds at hand that led Gupta s sons to encourage him to look into expansion They had thought of Gorakhpur as the first place to go as it did have a local newspaper or a newspaper edition that was based in the city at that time Gorakhpur was instead being covered by the Varanasi based Aj and the city lay within its circulation area Aj itself had a monetary surplus and its editor Vinod Shukla was looking to expand the newspaper as he predicted that a single edition newspaper in Uttar Pradesh would become unviable in the long term 9 Shukla who had visited Kanpur in 1974 found Jagran to have carried very substandard content and expected an expansion attempt in the city to be easy 9 11 The paper had brought out printing machines for Kanpur in December and responded almost immediately after Jagran s Gorakhpur launch by launching its own Kanpur edition in April 1975 11 The Kanpur edition of Aj had launched only two months before the imposition of Emergency rule and subsequent press censorship 12 Shivprasad Gupta the owner of Aj was unsure about the expansion but Shukla supported by Gupta s son used the period as an opportunity to consolidate the newspaper 9 The Emergency created a demand for critical journalism which the newspaper provided and enabled it to make inroads in Jagran s market share On the streets of Kanpur fights broke out between men hired by the two newspapers who used weapons such as batons and improvised firearms against each other for control over offices territory and distribution 12 In midst of the conflict hawkers gained significant influence over the newspapers initially Aj was charged a commission rate of 20 while Jagran was charged 30 but the hawkers forced the former to increase its rate over the latter marking the beginning of a period of fierce negotiations over commission rates and recurrent increases in the rates for both newspapers Eventually the conflict ended when the two newspapers decided to join hands against the hawkers and pushed the commission rate back down to a fixed 30 13 During the Emergency the circulation of Hindi newspapers rose significantly as a result of increased political consciousness and by 1977 the number of newspapers that were selling more 100 000 copies had risen to over 10 from a figure three before its imposition Dainik Jagran and Aj were both among the new newspapers to join the 100 000 club 14 The period had transformed the newspaper industry and regional language papers including that of Hindi became the face of the rapidly changing industry that would be transformed into mass media over the course of the following decades 12 14 Government policy was changed as well which facilitated the growth of the industry 12 Expansion in Uttar Pradesh Edit Jhansi 1942 Kanpur 1947 Gorakhpur 1975 Lucknow 1979 Varanasi 1981 Meerut 1984 Agra 1986 Bareilly 1989 class notpageimage Editions of Dainik Jagran in Uttar Pradesh as of 1990 The launch of Jagran s Gorakhpur edition marked the beginning of the newspaper s own period of rapid expansion In 1979 the newspaper launched two editions in Lucknow and Allahabad 9 Vinod Shukla was hired to oversee the Lucknow edition and help them force its way into the Lucknow market where the newspaper faced intense competition and pressures from trade unions 11 The Allahabad edition was shifted to Varanasi in 1981 The newspaper then entered the circulation area of Amar Ujala launching a Meerut edition in 1984 an Agra edition in 1986 and a Bareilly edition in 1989 9 In 1989 90 Navbharat Times which dominated the circulation in Lucknow discontinued all its editions except the Bombay and Delhi editions after being hit by an eight month long shut down in the cities of Lucknow and Patna The discontinuation allowed Jagran to rapidly increase its circulation in the Lucknow region with minimal hindrance 15 Anti Reservation stir and Communalism Edit The owners of the mainstream Hindi newspapers came from upper caste families 8 and had mercantile urban backgrounds The Gupta family that owned the Dainik Jagran was one them They social background of the owners formed the core base of support for the Jan Sangh and its successor the Bharatiya Janata Party 16 The reporters of these newspapers were generally given clear instructions by owners and their editors to toe a particular line in their reports 17 The announcement from the V P Singh government on implementation of reservations for backward castes on the basis the Mandal Commission recommendations around 1990 became the impetus for many of these newspapers to promote Hindutva propaganda 14 Uttar Pradesh between 1989 and 1992 had severe communal tension as a consequence of the Ram Janmabhoomi movement 18 which also made espousing Hindutva profitable as communal reportage generated greater circulation and advertisement revenue The kind of reportage was further spurred on by direct financial and social support from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh Vishwa Hindu Parishad and other Hindutva organisations 14 Dainik Jagran in particular used the situation as an opportunity and took advantage of it by pandering to communal sentiments It would establish itself as the dominant newspaper in the state during this period 18 The newspaper adopted an openly pro Bharatiya Janata Party and pro Vishwa Hindu Parishad line helped disseminate Hindutva opinions and presented heavily skewed as well as falsified accounts of the opposition to the Ram Janmabhoomi movement 19 while taking an heavily adversarial stance towards the parallel emergence of backwards caste and Dalit movements 8 During the Ram Rath Yatra Jagran strongly endorsed the movement and began asking readers through news reports and editorials to take a stand 19 Between late November and early December 1992 the weeks leading up to the demolition of the Babri Masjid the newspaper would regularly dedicate eight columns on the front page to the Ayodhya Ram Janmabhoomi episode The sustained coverage is considered to be unprecedented in the history of print and electronic media According to an insider at Jagran newsrooms the bias was so conspicuous that the staff chanted Jai Shri Ram when the mosque was brought down 17 Stamp issued in 2003 depicting Narendra Mohan Narendra Mohan the Chairman of the Jagran Prakashan would get elected to the Rajya Sabha through a nomination from the Bharatiya Janata Party 8 In Ranchi a complaint was filed at the Press Council of India against Aj and Jagran by a local editor for instigating communalism 20 The animosity towards lower castes culminated into an incident known as the Halla Bol in 1994 where the offices of the Jagran and those of Amar Ujala faced widespread attacks from followers of Mulayam Singh Yadav 8 The Press Council would eventually rebuke Jagran among several other newspapers for instigating mass hysteria and provoking communal hatred through rumours exaggeration doctored pictures fabricated figures and other distortions 21 Mohan would some years later instruct his editorial staff to tone down its coverage so that it wouldn t be seen as a substitute to Panchajanya the official Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh magazine 20 Mayawati daughter story 1995 Edit In December 1995 Dainik Jagran published a story with the claim that Mayawati the leader of the Bahujan Samaj Party had an illegitimate 12 year old daughter 22 Published at the bottom of the first page in a short two column section the story included claims that her daughter was hidden away in New Delhi and was borne out of a former love marriage based on an interview with a disgrunted member of the party 23 The newspaper went to the extent of calling Mayawati a chamarin a derogatory slur used for Dalit women 22 Despite the story having been given less importance by the newspaper it created a sensation as having an illegitimate child was a serious accusation for an unmarried woman and a question of virtue In addition Mayawati maintained a public image that she had denied herself family and children to fulfill the objectives of the Self Respect Movement which sought equality for lower castes 23 The story caused resentment among Dalits and the Bahujan Samaj Party BSP which mainly drew support from them described it as the latest example of a Brahmin dominated press and establishment s constant mudslinging against lower castes 24 a In Lucknow supporters of the party demonstrated around the office of the newspaper blockading it for a day There were reports of violence during the protest and the author who wrote the piece was threatened 23 The story also faced criticism from journalists and commentators It was condemned as sensationalist journalism that was engaging in gossip about the private life of a female politician and disparaging her The criticism was accompanied by questions on Dainik Jagran s ambitions of becoming a serious national newspaper and charges of the newspaper lacking journalistic ethics professionalism and credibility 23 24 Some of the prominent critics included the chairman of the Press Council Judge P B Sawant and the editor in chief of Jansatta Prabash Joshi 26 K Vikram Rao the national chairman of a major journalist s union suggested that a more rigorous system was required that a specialised training in journalism should be needed before a person could be employed by a newspaper and that the Press Council should have stronger tools for penalising journalists 27 Staff at the newspaper strongly rejected the charges against the newspaper though they were apologetic about the story 23 Vinod Shukla who was the resident editor in Lucknow was infuriated by the criticism particularly that from Joshi and dismissed it as jealously during his editorial meetings 28 Narendra Mohan who was the owner and editor in chief of the newspapers at the time responded to the criticism with an editorial In the newspaper s defense he stated that the newspaper itself was against this kind of journalism and he regretted that the story had been published but alleged that the fault lay on western norms influencing Indian journalism and on Mayawati herself who according to him used ugly language and was part of a trend where Indian politics had become unethical which had led to the situation 29 In response to the protest by BSP supporters journalists who were supportive of newspaper held their own protest against the party describing it to be in defense of press freedom It was reported that several newspapers were going to boycott the party s campaign during the upcoming assembly election though the boycott was only upheld by Dainik Jagran 23 Some commentators noted that while journalists had frequently faced violence generally from Hindutva groups such an instance leading to a boycott was unique and had resulted from the only instance in which a newspaper had faced attacks from a Dalit group 29 Later expansions Edit The Delhi edition of the Daink Jagran was launched in 1990 According to the then Chairman of Jagran Prakashan Yogendra Mohan Gupta his executives had advised him that in order to make Jagran a national newspaper they had to launch an edition in Delhi 9 From the 1990s onwards established Hindi language newspapers such as the Dainik Jagran Dainik Bhaskar and Amar Ujala went on a multi edition expansion beyond their home states 30 31 32 The newspapers had a new generation of foreign educated heirs generally sons or nephews of the older owners who unlike their predecessors took active interest in expansions capital acquisition and partnerships 33 For Jagran it was the second and third generation of the proprietors who charted the expansion and localisation strategy of the newspaper 34 The expanding newspapers were motivated by the prospects of revenues that could be obtained by offering increased overall readership figures to advertisers 30 They copied the strategy that was devised by Samir Jain s The Times of India a newspaper that had become extremely profitable by increasing marketing efforts introducing colored newspapers while lowering cover prices that starting price wars and led to increase in circulation which in turn brought in high revenues from advertisements 31 Dainik Jagran also adopted a mass media content strategy of localisation through trivia laden local news 35 and employed local part time stringers for its newsgathering operations 36 The expansion efforts by the established newspapers led to increased localisation of news content across the Hindi belt but severely harmed stand alone local newspapers who were unable to compete against them in terms of production or offers to advertisers 30 The changes however did not bring about any improvements in the working conditions job security and professional autonomy of reporters Most of them were kept as part timers and those who were granted regular positions were retained on a hire and fire basis In 1992 Jagran had only 55 full time staff correspondents and 300 working journalists in a total staff strength of 700 the rest being stringers regional correspondents etc 37 Jagran launched its Aligarh edition in 1993 the Dehradun edition in 1997 and the Jalandhar edition in 1999 9 In 1995 its circulation exceeded 0 5 million and the newspaper was being published from 12 locations across Uttar Pradesh and in New Delhi 38 In 1998 the newspaper received a competitive boost when the Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee gave an exclusive interview for it in midst of the Kargil War The interview was later seen as an act of political patronage towards a newspaper that had remained loyal to Vajpayee and his Bharatiya Janata Party 39 In the National Readership Survey of 1999 Dainik Jagran was seen to have become the first Hindi language newspaper to feature in the top 5 newspapers in terms of readership at a time when newspapers from southern India dominated the readership figures 40 The launch of the Jalandhar edition in Punjab in 1999 was the first of a series of editions outside Uttar Pradesh and is described to have been the beginning of its real expansion 32 In 2000 the Dainik Jagran launched three editions in Hissar Patna and Allahabad and in the following year it launched an edition in Moradabad 9 In Patna the capital of Bihar the newspaper focused on crime stories and prioritised presenting the law and order situation in a negative light to its readers 41 When Uttaranchal became a state with Dehradun as its capital Dainik Jagran s circulation experienced a fourfold growth in the new state due to the increased commercial importance of the state s capital 42 In February 2003 the newspaper launched 3 editions in Jharkhand in the cities of Ranchi Jamshedpur and Dhanbad It was aggressively marketed and publicised but was unable to make a significant impact as Prabhat Khabar dominated the market in the state 43 Dainik Jagran launched editions in Bhagalpur and Panipat in the same year two more editions in the cities of Ludhiana and Nainital in 2004 and then the Muzaffarpur Dharamshala and Jammu editions in 2005 9 In Punjab the newspaper faced competition from the likes of Dainik Bhaskar Amar Ujala and Hindustan all of which expanded aggressively in the state The rapid expansion by the 4 newspapers broke down the dominance of Punjab Kesari by 2005 44 In the meantime commercial interests in the wake of the rapid rise of Hindi newspaper readership compelled the mainstream Hindi newspapers to moderate their adversarial stance towards backward and scheduled caste leaders By 2006 the upper caste Chairman of Jagran Prakashan Mahendra Mohan Gupta was vying for and received a Rajya Sabha nomination from the Samajwadi Socialist Party which was led by the backward caste Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Mulayam Singh Yadav who had also been an old adversary for the newspaper 8 From 2004 onwards Dainik Jagran had emerged as the newspaper with the largest readership having displaced Dainik Bhaskar that had occupied the position since 2002 45 The two newspapers had maintained a tacit understanding since the beginning of their out of state expansion drives in the mid 1990s that they would not encroach upon each other s territories As a consequence Jagran had not launched a new edition in Madhya Pradesh or Chhattisgarh while Bhaskar had not launched any editions in Uttar Pradesh Bihar or Jharkhand 32 In the state of Madhya Pradesh those who were subscribed to Dainik Jagran were primarily migrants who had come from Utter Pradesh and wanted news from their native region 46 In 2006 the understanding between the two was broken by Jagran when the newspapers launched its Indore edition which marked the beginning of a period intense rivalry between the two The new edition was unsuccessful in making in roads in the market unable to compete against the Indore edition of Dainik Bhaskar as well as the newspaper Nai Duniya that was based in the same city while Bhaskar went on to launch its own edition in Jagran s territory 32 b c On 8 July 2006 Dainik Jagran also launched its Siliguri edition just two days after the Nathu La mountain pass was opened with the expectation that the city would become a major commercial centre The launch added to the intensification of competition in the region which lay beyond the Hindi belt and already had editions of the two Hindi newspapers namely Prabhat Khabar and Rajasthan Patrika the former of which was launched only a few months ago in March 47 Government advertisements and shrinking readership Edit From the onset of Narendra Modi s tenure as the Prime Minister of India government spending on advertisements in Dainik Jagran saw a sharp increase with exorbitant spending on regular advertisements Between 2014 15 and 2018 19 the revenues generated solely from government advertisements of the Central Government was reported to have increased to over 100 crore US 13 million 48 The advertisement spending included political promotions and advertisements disguised as news items 48 49 In one instance five full page advertisements were published in the newspaper in the period between 25 and 27 May 2015 celebrating the one year anniversary of Modi government 50 In one financial year FY2017 18 the newspaper received 36 4 crore US 4 6 million in ad revenue from the Central Government which was more than the combined ad revenue of 33 2 crore US 4 2 million that the paper had received between 2010 and 2013 covering three financial years before Modi had come to power Jagran s sister publications such as Mid Day and Inquilab experienced similar increases in revenue from government advertisements The advertisement spending by state governments of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party particularly the Uttar Pradesh Government whose advertisements regularly featured in the newspaper was not disclosed upon Right to Information RTI requests 48 The government also inducted Sanjay Gupta the editor in chief of the newspaper into the board of Prasar Bharati India s public broadcaster in 2020 51 Per the Indian Readership Survey in 2019 Dainik Jagran s average issue readership fell by 17 from a figure of 20 3 million to 16 9 million In Uttar Pradesh which stood as its biggest market the readership fell from 12 million to 9 97 million while in the state of Bihar it fell from 3 41 million to 2 97 million The fall in readership was part of a general trend of fall in newspaper readership due to economic slowdown only 3 out of the 10 newspapers with the largest readership did not experience a fall One of them was its rival Dainik Bhaskar which came close to displacing Jagran s position as the newspaper with the largest readership Its readership had increased from 15 4 to 15 6 million with gains in Bihar According to media watchdog Newslaundry the Dainik Jagran was suffering from falling credibility in a politically polluted atmosphere among other issues 52 Majithia Board recommendations Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2022 Coronavirus pandemic and aftermath Edit On 22 March 2020 the COVID 19 lockdown in India was announced and it heavily impacted news publishers who were already strained due to the emergence of other forms of news media that had splintered audiences and due to the economic slowdown caused by demonitisation and GST R K Agarwal the CFO of Jagran Prakashan described the situation as a nightmare Dainik Jagran adopted across the board cost cutting measures the newspapers halved the number of pages and consolidated printing It also started raising its cover prices whenever it could which Agarwal claimed was done to recover lost advertisement revenue 53 In its pandemic reportage the newspaper promoted conspiracy theories against Muslims and extensively publicised the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh including through the publication of various articles authored by its senior leaders 54 The overall coverage lacked transparency journalistic ethics accuracy and factual reporting 55 The reportage prioritised stories on Tablighi Jamaat publishing 230 of them on its frontpage including 120 above the fold and blamed Muslims for the pandemic 54 The newspaper created a narrative that the government was well prepared and had brought the pandemic under control but simultaneously presented the idea that Muslims were intentionally spreading the virus which had led to the nation losing the battle against coronavirus Muslims were dehumanised as the nation s enemies and depicted as uncivilised violent people who attacked healthcare professionals and violated lockdown measures 56 Dainik Jagran s coverage largely ignored and distracted from issues such as the mass exodus of migrant workers low testing rates the lack of PPE kits and ventilators in hospitals and general mismanagement by the government It instead condemned opposition parties that criticised the Bharatiya Janata Party BJP government s management and accused them of spreading negativity at a time when the government was dealing with a war like situation The newspaper itself criticised measures taken by state governments with an opposition party or coalition in power while praising similar measures taken in Bharatiya Janata Party ruled states 56 Mass burials story 2021 Edit During second wave of the pandemic national news publishers such as Dainik Bhaskar India Today magazine and Mojo Story and international ones such as Reuters and BBC had published reports and images of mass burials on the banks of the river Ganga and bodies floating all across the river caused by people s inability to afford crematoriums that were severely overburdened from Coronavirus related deaths 57 On 23 May 2021 Dainik Jagran published a frontpage story that claimed that the mass burials were normal that no increase in deaths had occurred and that those who were buried had died of leprosy and snake bites dismissing the reports from other news publishers as mere sensationalism The story included a comparison of a recent image with an image that it claimed was taken three years ago from a mass burial at the Shringverpur ghat in Prayagraj and on its basis falsely stated that most images of mass burials at the ghat were taken before the pandemic According to the news piece Jagran had employed a five man team who made finding after covering over a dozen villages along a 70 km stretch on the Ganga which included the Phaphamau and Shringverpur ghats The story was highlighted by BJP politicians including the Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and then followed by a series of reports from the newspaper between late May to early June that attempted to reinforce the same idea The newspaper before publishing the 23 May piece had previously published news reports which contradictorily stated that there was an increase in mass burials and coronavirus related deaths 57 In June a journalistic investigation was conducted into the claims made by Dainik Jagran that found their claims did not match ground realities and noted that the newspaper was known to have been receiving large revenues through government advertisements and disguising them as news The investigation could not verify the age of the old image but it was found that the image was taken at a different location Independent journalist Prashant Singh conducted several interviews with pandits pandas household priests gravediggers and other locals at the two ghats who all confirmed that while some burials had always occurred they had never seen such a large scale increase in their numbers before the pandemic 57 The investigative report was published by the fact checking organisation Alt News 58 59 which was supported by Prayagraj based photojournalist Prabhat Kumar Verma Aaj Tak reporter Shivendra Srivastav who had covered Phaphamau ghat and government data related to local management Alt News contacted reporters at Dainik Jagran s Prayaraj edition who refused to comment on the story but two of them confirmed that there was an unprecedented increase in the number of mass burials 57 In response to the Alt News report Dainik Jagran filed a defamation case against the organisation claiming that the report had made disparging remarks about the newspaper and forwarded a plea that the report should be suppressed for the duration of the case On 1 November 2021 the Delhi High Court squashed the plea stating that there was no reason to intervene and stifle free speech noting the interviews that the report was based on and stated the report was within the ambit of public interest 60 61 Organisation EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2022 Sanjay Gupta is the chief executive officer and editor in chief of the newspaper 62 Since 2020 he has also been appointed by the Modi government to the board of Prasar Bharati India s public broadcaster 51 The news staff consists of a large number of local stringer informants who obtain news items from small towns and villages for the newspaper s sub edition pages containing district specific news The stringers generally do not have qualifications in journalism 63 Content EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2022 Paid news Edit Dainik Jagran was first named in a 2010 report to the Press Council of India as one of the newspapers publishing undisclosed paid news for celebrities politicians and companies 64 The newspaper publishes advertisements disguised as news reports for the Yogi Adityanath government The advertisements copy the newspaper s general news report style and are usually published on the front pages They are sometimes accompanied with bylines to Dainik Jagran s staff some of whom have been identified to be members of the newspaper s marketing team 49 The contents of the advertorial advertisements include laudatory reports of the government s activities quotes from apparent residents praising the government and statements made by Bharatiya Janata Party politicians presented as facts without any attribution Several of the newspaper s own news reports were repurposed into government advertisements at a later date and presented as new stories which according to media analyst Vineet Kumar brings into question the credibility of its general reportage as well Some of the advertorial reports have been found to be duplicates of reports which were earlier published as news items by outlets such as Zee News and the newspaper Uday Bhoomi 48 49 Editorial stance Edit Dainik Jagran is a right wing newspaper 8 51 that espouses the Hindutva ideology 8 65 The newspaper has never openly admitted to any leanings and claims that it is neutral in its political orientation 39 The newspaper has consistently espoused a nativist rhetoric of identity politics for the construction of a temple dedicated to Rama at the site believed to be Ram Janmabhoomi transl Birthplace of Rama through its opinion editorials and in editorialised news reports 66 Criticism Edit Dainik Jagran observed silence over Delhi violence and was accused of suppressing the incident 67 Dainik Jagran is also accused of running false narratives in support of the BJP government It ran a news covering Hathras gangrape and murder incident declaring it as a false case of rape and tried to defend the rapists which were later refuted by the CBI when it said that gangrape did occur and the state tried to do a cover up 68 Dainik Jagran is accused of running smear campaigns against Indian mathematician and educationalist Anand Kumar printing false news about his institution called Super 30 69 Dainik Jagran demonised and ran a smear campaign against activist Afreen Fatima when UP officials demolished her house including claiming that she expressed her support for terrorist Afzal Guru 70 Dainik Jagran trademark dispute EditThe trademark name Dainik Jagran is the subject of an ongoing civil lawsuit initiated by the G D Gupta family against Jagran Prakashan in 2007 The G D Gupta family are the controlling shareholders of Jagran Publications Pvt Ltd an associate company which publishes the Rewa and Bhopal editions 71 According to the lawsuit the P C Gupta family controlled Jagran Prakashan is making unauthorised use of the trademark name and has laid a false claim of exclusive rights over it On the basis of a family partition dating back to 12 June 1951 and an additional agreement signed on 10 January 1976 the lawsuit states that the trademark name is jointly owned by the lineal descendants of the three brothers namely J C Arya G D Gupta and P C Gupta and not solely by the P C Gupta family The J C Arya family own the associate company Dainik Jagran LLP which publishes the Jhansi edition of the newspaper 62 The lawsuit was started by Madan Mohan Gupta backed by several other members of the family and they applied for an injunction seeking an interim restraining order over the use of the trademark name In 2010 Sanjeev Mohan Gupta the director of Jagran Publications Pvt Ltd also appealed to the Foreign Investment Promotion Board FIPB seeking rejection of Jagran Prakashan s holding company transferring shares to Blackstone Group that was planning on investing in the company 62 S M Gupta stated that the unauthorised transfer of shares without consultation with the associate companies adversely affected them and would lead to brand dilution adding that while the case was being litigated at the High Court of Delhi the transfer would create third party interests in it 71 Jagran Prakashan rejected all claims made by the lawsuit contesting that the two agreements had any impact over the rights and reiterated its claim of exclusive rights on the trademark name Responding to the appeal at FIPB the company contested that the transfer of shares related to a different entity and did not concern the subject matter of the litigation 71 In light of the fact that 35 out of the 39 editions of Dainik Jagran are registered under Jagran Prakashan the court did not find sufficient grounds for an interim restraining order on the use of the trademark name The company has also been allowed to go ahead with its transfer of shares and others mergers and acquisitions while the case continues to be litigated in court 62 See also EditHalla Bol campaignNotes Edit Dainik Jagran s story on Mayawati also revived earlier rumours that she had been in an illicit long term relationship with the founder Kanshi Ram which contributed to the general depiction of Dalits as immoral people 25 Jagran Prakashan eventually bought out the Indore based Nai Duniya in 2012 to establish a presence in Madhya Pradesh 32 Dainik Bhaskar would respond to the launch of Dainik Jagran s Indore edition by launching its own editions in Ranchi Jamshedpur Dhanbad and Patna between 2010 and 2014 32 References Edit Highest Circulated Daily Newspapers language wise PDF Audit Bureau of Circulations Retrieved 5 January 2019 Aneez Z Chattapadhyay S Parthasarathi V Nielsen R K 2016 Centre for Internet and Society Digital Transition of Newspapers in India Dainik Jagran Hindustan Times and Malayala Manorama Indian Newspapers Digital Transition Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism via University of Oxford Details of most circulated publications for the audit period Jan Jun 2016 PDF Audit Bureau of Circulations Retrieved 27 December 2016 INDIAN READERSHIP SURVEY 2019 Q4 PDF Indian Readership Survey Nag Tirthankar Basu Rituparna Dasgupta Buroshiva 1 January 2017 Dainik Jagran sustaining leadership in the newspaper industry Emerald Emerging Markets Case Studies 7 1 1 36 doi 10 1108 EEMCS 05 2016 0083 ISSN 2045 0621 a b c d e f g h Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 54 56 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Bhaskar B R P 2005 Flourishing Papers Floundering Craft The Press and the Law In Rajan Nalini ed Practising Journalism Values Constraints Implications SAGE Publications pp 34 35 ISBN 978 0 7619 3378 6 a b c d e f g h Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 17 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 92 93 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 62 63 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b c d e Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 57 58 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b c d Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 58 59 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 269 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b c d Rajagopal Arvind 2001 Politics After Television Hindu Nationalism and the Reshaping of the Public in India Cambridge University Press pp 177 178 ISBN 978 0 521 64839 4 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 44 45 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Jeffrey Robin 2005 The Public Sphere of Print Journalism In Rajan Nalini ed Practising Journalism Values Constraints Implications SAGE Publications p 268 ISBN 978 0 7619 3378 6 a b Rajagopal Arvind 2001 Politics After Television Hindu Nationalism and the Reshaping of the Public in India Cambridge University Press p 181 ISBN 978 0 521 64839 4 a b Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 224 225 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 223 224 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 225 226 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Rajagopal Arvind 2001 Politics After Television Hindu Nationalism and the Reshaping of the Public in India Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 978 0 521 64839 4 a b Neyazi Taberez Ahmed 2018 Political Communication and Mobilisation The Hindi Media in India Cambridge University Press p 89 ISBN 978 1 108 41613 9 a b c d e f Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 209 211 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 a b Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 215 216 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 Jaffrelot Christophe 2003 India s Silent Revolution The Rise of the Lower Castes in North India Columbia University Press p 414 ISBN 978 0 23112 786 8 Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 218 219 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 217 218 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 220 222 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 a b Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 216 217 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 a b c Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 14 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b Kohli Khandekar Vanita 2013 The Indian Media Business Pandemic and After SAGE Publications pp 14 15 ISBN 978 81 321 1356 0 a b c d e f Neyazi Taberez Ahmed 2018 Political Communication and Mobilisation The Hindi Media in India Cambridge University Press pp 107 108 ISBN 978 1 108 41613 9 Kohli Khandekar Vanita 2013 The Indian Media Business Pandemic and After SAGE Publications pp 16 17 ISBN 978 81 321 1356 0 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 20 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 24 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 42 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Rajagopal Arvind 2001 Politics After Television Hindu Nationalism and the Reshaping of the Public in India Cambridge University Press pp 178 179 ISBN 978 0 521 64839 4 Stahlberg Per 2002 The Illicit Daughter Hindi Language Newspapers and the Regionalisation of the Public Sphere in India In Poluha Eva Rosendahl Mona eds Contesting Good Governance Crosscultural Perspectives on Representation Accountability and Public Space 1 ed Routledge pp 211 215 doi 10 4324 9780203037331 10 ISBN 978 1 136 12538 6 a b Neyazi Taberez Ahmed 2018 Political Communication and Mobilisation The Hindi Media in India Cambridge University Press pp 108 109 ISBN 978 1 108 41613 9 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 16 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 159 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 196 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Harivansh 2005 Prabhat Khabar An Experiment in Journalism In Rajan Nalini ed Practising Journalism Values Constraints Implications SAGE Publications pp 47 48 ISBN 978 0 7619 3378 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 47 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications p 43 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 73 74 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 Ninan Sevanti 2007 Headlines From the Heartland Reinventing the Hindi Public Sphere SAGE Publications pp 106 107 ISBN 978 81 7829 971 6 a b c d Tiwari Ayush Kumar Basant 20 February 2021 A Dainik Jagran guide to Adityanath government s propaganda Newslaundry a b c Kumar Basant 7 October 2021 Let Dainik Jagran teach you the art of disguising ads as news Newslaundry Singh Mahima 28 May 2015 The Ad Rush At Least 90 Lakh Was Spent To Mark 100 Days of AAP And One Year Of Modi In Delhi Alone Newslaundry a b c Dainik Jagran editor in chief Sanjay Gupta inducted as a member of the Prasar Bharati Board Newslaundry 8 July 2020 Joseph Anto T 16 May 2020 For newspapers battered by the economic slowdown Covid 19 is the final blow Newslaundry Kohli Khandekar Vanita 2013 The Indian Media Business Pandemic and After SAGE Publications pp 2 3 ISBN 978 81 321 1356 0 a b Musolff Andreas Breeze Ruth Kondo Kayo Vilar Lluch Sara 2022 Pandemic and Crisis Discourse Communicating COVID 19 and Public Health Strategy Bloomsbury Academic pp 362 363 ISBN 978 1 350 23269 3 Musolff Andreas Breeze Ruth Kondo Kayo Vilar Lluch Sara 2022 Pandemic and Crisis Discourse Communicating COVID 19 and Public Health Strategy Bloomsbury Academic p 368 ISBN 978 1 350 23269 3 a b Musolff Andreas Breeze Ruth Kondo Kayo Vilar Lluch Sara 2022 Pandemic and Crisis Discourse Communicating COVID 19 and Public Health Strategy Bloomsbury Academic pp 364 365 ISBN 978 1 350 23269 3 a b c d Mehta Archit Singh Prashant 29 May 2021 Dainik Jagran s misleading reports portray mass burials in Prayagraj haven t risen due to COVID Alt News Court rejects Dainik Jagran plea to remove Alt News article on its reporting of mass burials Scroll in 3 November 2021 Delhi Court Rejects Dainik Jagran s Injunction Application to Take Down Alt News Article The Wire 3 November 2021 Thapliyal Nupur 2 November 2021 No Reason To Intervene amp Stifle Ever Widening Contours Of Free Speech Delhi Court Rejects Dainik Jagran s Plea Seeking Removal Of Alt News Article Live Law Hasan Zeb 2 November 2021 No reason to intervene and stifle free speech Delhi Court junks Dainik Jagran plea seeking removal of Alt News article Bar amp Bench a b c d Bhula Pooja 19 September 2022 Who Owns Your Media Jagran Group and the story of India s most read daily Newslaundry Neyazi Taberez Ahmed 2018 Political Communication and Mobilisation The Hindi Media in India Cambridge University Press p 80 ISBN 978 1 108 41613 9 Neyazi Taberez Ahmed 2018 Political Communication and Mobilisation The Hindi Media in India Cambridge University Press pp 109 110 ISBN 978 1 108 41613 9 Azam Shireen 1 December 2020 Why the Hindu nationalist Jagran group runs the Urdu daily Inquilab The Caravan Vardhan Anand 4 April 2017 Dainik Jagran the steady voice of the Ram temple movement Newslaundry Jagran ignores Delhi violence Ujala leads with it a look at front pages of Hindi press The print David Supriti How Dainik Jagran and TOI s Lucknow editions ignored the Hathras rape Newslaundry Retrieved 22 October 2021 Amarnath Tewary 22 August 2018 Bihar Super 30 founder faces smear campaign The Hindu Archived from the original on 13 July 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 When asked who is behind all this he quipped everyone knows in Patna who is he why should I take his name Is he former DGP Abhyanand who was earlier associated with Super 30 for five years Mr Kumar did not respond Dainik Jagran plays judge jury and executioner as UP officials raze Afreen Fatima s house Newslaundry 13 June 2022 Retrieved 10 September 2022 a b c Mukherjee Sharmistha 29 May 2010 Jagran proprietors clash over Blackstone infusion Business Standard External links EditOfficial website in Hindi Coordinates 26 28 50 N 80 18 07 E 26 48050 N 80 30200 E 26 48050 80 30200 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dainik Jagran amp oldid 1128771922, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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