[sustran] FW: BRT petition

Madhav Badami, Prof. madhav.g.badami at mcgill.ca
Mon Apr 28 22:34:20 JST 2008


Dear all,
 
Dunu Roy, noted environmentalist and social activist, and Director of the Hazard Centre in New Delhi, has prepared a petition to protest the sustained anti-BRT campaign and the personal vilification of Dinesh Mohan and Geetam Tiwari of IIT Delhi by the Times of India.
 
He wishes to send the signed petition (see below) to the Times of India in the next few hours. If you wish to sign it, please confirm directly to Dunu Roy (at qadeeroy at gmail.com) that you wish to do so.
 
Madhav
************************************************************************

"As for the future, your task is not to foresee, but to enable it."
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
 
Madhav G. Badami, PhD
School of Urban Planning and McGill School of Environment
McGill University
Macdonald-Harrington Building
815 Sherbrooke Street West
Montreal, QC, H3A 2K6, Canada
 
Phone: 514-398-3183 (Work); 514-486-2370 (Home)
Fax: 514-398-8376; 514-398-1643
URLs: www.mcgill.ca/urbanplanning
www.mcgill.ca/mse
e-mail: madhav.badami at mcgill.ca

________________________________

From: Dunu Roy [mailto:qadeeroy at gmail.com]
Sent: Sat 4/26/2008 2:14 PM
To: Anhad; Bose Krishnendu; Shreekant Gupta; himanshu upadhyaya; Ramaswamy R.Iyer; Arun Kumar; kasturi sen; Madhav Badami, Prof.; ncsaxena at vsnl.net; sunita at cseindia.org; Vandana Shiva; vibha arora; Vinay Baindur
Subject: BRT petition


Dear fellow scientists and friends,
We are sending you a letter addressed to the Times of India, which is attached, protesting against the vilification campaign being carried out against two of our colleagues in the Indian Institute of Delhi who are trying to uphold the best traditions of people-supportive research. Such innuendo hurts us all and denigrates the value of all science. Please do let us know by return mail if you would agree to sign this letter, giving your name and designation.
Please do also circulate to others who may wish to sign the letter.
Thanking you in anticipation
Dunu Roy, Imrana Qadeer
 

To

The Editor

The Times of India

Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg

New Delhi 110002

 

The High Capacity Bus System has found many ardent advocates the world over as a relatively inexpensive and efficient mass transport system. Renamed - somewhat incorrectly - as the Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) in the city of Delhi, it has been designed not only for the most widely used form of public transport (the bus carries about 40% of the 15 million passenger trips per day in the city), but also provides demarcated space for the cyclist and the pedestrian (who account for another 42%), while leaving a substantial two lanes for the private cars and two/three-wheelers (which account for the remaining 8% and 10% respectively).

 

Nevertheless, some media channels - particularly the Times of India - have been carrying on a sustained campaign against the first BRT corridor being constructed in Delhi calling it, amongst other things, a "manic mess", "killer corridor", and "Tughluqian disaster". These various newspapers and television channels (who seem to be more intent on being newsmakers) are legitimately entitled to present the views of various citizens groups - although it is striking that most of the 'citizens' interviewed are private car owners - but there is also an ethical limit to how the news and views should be presented.

 

The recent front-page headline in the Times of India of April 25, 2008, reads, "IIT dept behind BRT gets funds from bus makers" and accuses "Dinesh Mohan and Geetam Tiwari from IIT-D's Transport Research and Injury Prevention Programme" of being patronised by the "Volvo Education Research Foundation and Ford Motor Company".

 

We would, firstly, like to point out that it is the Government of India's stated policy to encourage all public science research institutions to raise their own funds from charitable trusts and foundations and industry and not depend solely upon the University Grants Commission - and this is part of the process of 'liberalisation' that has been enthusiastically supported and promoted by the editors of many newspapers, including the Times of India. 

 

Secondly, to resort to this kind of journalistic innuendo that, therefore, all scientific research must inevitably follow the dictates of the funding agencies casts grave aspersions on the character of objective research conducted at recognised world-class institutions like the IIT. Using discredited methods of rapid opinion-polls, which are known to be biased and a popular means of market promotion, the Times of India is challenging a system based on sound scientific research, in a clear effort to protect the interests of a minority of car drivers, without clarifying what is the rational basis for their 'research' methodology, nor what is the source of their inspiration.

 

We condemn, in no uncertain terms, this violation of journalistic ethics by a daily that claims the pride of being India's widest read English newspaper and demand that the editors immediately publish an unqualified apology to the concerned scientists.

 

Dunu Roy, Director, Hazards Centre, Delhi

Imrana Qadeer, ex-Professor, JNU, Delhi



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