1 Chapter Seven FORGETTING TO REMEMBER: THE PRIVATISATION OF THE PUBLIC, THE ECONOMISATION OF HINDUTVA AND THE MEDIALISATION OF GENOCIDE Britta Ohm On 8 December 2007, anchorwoman Barkha Dutt from the English-language section of the private Indian national news broadcaster NDTV(New Delhi Television, that was until 2003 Star News, part of Rupert Murdoch’s transnationalNews Corporation), had a very interesting article published in the Hindustan Times. Dated two weeks before Narendra Modi’s second electoral triumph as Chief Minister of the state of Gujarat was made public, it was – in the last phase of the election campaign – concerned with the media’s positioning vis- à-vis the infamous yet highly popular regional leader of the Hindu nationalist BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party). The controversy around Modi arises from his personal and administrative support for the systematic killing of well over 2000 Muslims between March and May 2002, the investigation of which has been largely thwarted but which is basically beyond doubt. Publicisation of the controversy is closely linked to the national, and particularly the English-language media, that often took a scandalised and highly critical stance towards Modi at the time; and again when the Gujarat electorate confirmed Modi in office in December 2002. In her article written five years later, Dutt analyses the personality cult that grew in intervening years around the Chief Minister in Gujarat. She considers it reminiscent of a ‘monsters’ ball’, that has pushed aside the dominance of traditional party hierarchies in the state. Pointing out the ‘tragic irony of today’s Gujarat’, namely that ‘a Modi-centric attack [by the media, B.O.] that dwells on the state-sponsored violence of 2002 only seems to rally public opinion around him’, Dutt concludes that in order ‘to ensure the future of Gujarat, we can no longer remain prisoners of the past’ 1 .