How were helping local reporters turn important stories into national news Gangadhar Patil

I’m a journalist.

And I know how frustrating it gets

when most of your stories go unnoticed.

I felt it when I worked
as a local reporter

in my hometown Belgaum, in India.

I thought maybe joining
a national newspaper would help.

So I went through professional training

and worked with India’s
three national newspapers.

During my five-year stint,
I used to travel for my stories.

It was in early 2012

I traveled 1,000 miles from Mumbai
to a coastal village in south India.

I was there to do a story

on environmental risk
of a nuclear power plant.

When I spoke to a local activist,

he said the story of hundreds of villagers
protesting against a nuclear power plant

was reported by local media

six months before
national TV channels picked it up.

I had similar experiences
when I traveled for other stories.

It confirmed my belief
that a local reporter knows a story

much before it is picked up
by national media.

But like me, they did not
have a platform to share them.

According to a 2011 media study,

only two percent of India’s
mainstream media coverage

is about rural issues.

Even though almost 70 percent
of India’s population,

1.3 billion population, live in villages.

This is disturbing for a democratic
country like India,

where transparency is key to ensure
justice to everyone, especially the poor.

I was convinced that there’s a need
to build a platform

to bring out this important story
at the national level.

So I quit my job with
“Economic Times” in December 2014.

For the next six months, I freelanced

and also built a database
of 20,000 local reporters across India.

During that time,

I saw editors who were looking
for more and more contributors

as news organizations cut down cost

by getting rid of hundreds
of full-time reporters.

I saw an opportunity
to highlight these important stories

if I can train these local reporters

and connect them
with the mainstream media.

And that is exactly what we are doing.

Our tech platform, for the first time,
discovers a local reporter,

grooms them,

and helps them write for national
and international publications.

A team of experienced editors
works closely with these local reporters

on each and every story filed by them.

This process not only helps the local
reporters learn reporting skills

but also gives credibility
to their stories.

In June 2017,

one of our local reporters,
Saurabh Sharma,

won an international award
from the European Commission

for his story on the hardships
faced by young girls living on the street.

We’re also trying to correct market
for these local reporters,

by paying them three times more
than the existing rates.

Better pay and recognition
is giving them confidence

to dig deeper and expose corruption
in the system and society.

We recently reported a story
from Northeast India

where children have to cross a river
in a huge cooking pot,

risking their life every day,

because there’s no bridge,
there’s no boat.

The story was picked up
by mainstream media

and it caught the attention
of a local elected representative

who promised to build a bridge.

In the last three years of our operations,

we have reported
more than 2,500 such stories.

To publish them
for a wider reach and impact,

we have partnered
with 16 leading media houses,

who are happy to take them,

as it brings their cost down,
by not editing or managing reporters.

Today, we have more
than 1,200 reporters in our network,

covering stories
like the nuclear power plant,

from places that are either ignored
by mainstream media

or never covered.

In the next five years,

we plan to have one reporter in each
of the 5,500 subdistricts in India,

covering the entire nation,

to ensure that none
of these important stories go unnoticed.

Next time you see
a story from the countryside,

please do not ignore it.

Do read and share them,
they might be breaking stories.

This way, we can ensure

none of the important
stories go unnoticed.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我是一名记者。

而且我知道

当你的大部分故事都被忽视时,它会变得多么令人沮丧。

当我

在我的家乡印度贝尔高姆担任当地记者时,我感受到了这一点。

我想也许加入
一家全国性报纸会有所帮助。

所以我接受了专业培训,

并在印度的
三个全国性报纸上工作。

在我五年的工作中,
我曾经为我的故事旅行。

2012 年初,

我从孟买走了 1000 英里,
来到了印度南部的一个沿海村庄。

我在那里做一个

关于核电站环境风险
的故事。

当我与当地的一位活动人士交谈时,

他说数百名村民抗议核电站的故事


国家电视台播出六个月前就被当地媒体报道了。

当我为其他故事旅行时,我也有类似的经历。

它证实了我的信念
,即当地

记者在国家媒体报道之前就已经知道一个故事

但像我一样,他们
没有平台来分享它们。

根据 2011 年的一项媒体研究,

只有 2% 的印度
主流媒体报道

是关于农村问题的。

尽管印度近 70%
的人口(

13 亿人口)生活在村庄中。

这对于
像印度这样的民主国家来说是令人不安的,

因为透明度是确保
每个人,尤其是穷人获得正义的关键。

我确信有
必要建立一个平台


在国家层面上展示这个重要的故事。

所以我
在 2014 年 12 月辞去了《经济时报》的工作。

在接下来的六个月里,我从事自由职业

,还建立了一个包含
印度各地 20,000 名当地记者的数据库。

在那段时间里,

我看到编辑们正在
寻找越来越多的投稿人,

因为新闻机构通过裁掉

数百
名全职记者来降低成本。

如果我能培训这些当地记者

并将他们
与主流媒体联系起来,我看到了一个突出这些重要故事的机会。

这正是我们正在做的事情。

我们的技术平台首次
发现当地记者,

培养他们,

并帮助他们为国内
和国际出版物撰稿。

一支经验丰富的编辑团队
与这些当地记者密切合作,处理

他们提交的每一个故事。

这个过程不仅可以帮助当地
记者学习报道技巧

,还可以
使他们的故事具有可信度。

2017 年 6 月

,我们的一位当地记者
Saurabh Sharma

因其讲述
了流落街头的年轻女孩所面临的艰辛而获得了欧盟委员会颁发的国际奖项。

我们还试图
为这些本地记者纠正市场

,向他们支付
比现有费率高出三倍的费用。

更好的薪酬和
认可让他们有信心

深入挖掘并揭露
系统和社会中的腐败。

我们最近报道了
印度东北部的一个故事

,孩子们不得不
在一个巨大的锅里过河,

每天冒着生命危险,

因为没有桥,
也没有船。

这个故事
被主流媒体报道

,并
引起了当地民选代表的注意,

他承诺要建造一座桥梁。

在过去三年的运营中,

我们报告
了 2,500 多个此类故事。

为了将它们发布
到更广泛的范围和影响力,

我们
与 16 家领先的媒体公司合作,

他们很乐意接受它们

,因为它
通过不编辑或管理记者来降低成本。

今天,我们的网络中有
1,200 多名记者,

报道核电站等新闻,

来自主流媒体忽视

或从未报道过的地方。

在接下来的五年中,

我们计划
在印度 5,500 个分区中的每个分区配备一名记者,

覆盖全国,

以确保
这些重要的故事不会被忽视。

下次你看到
农村的故事时,

请不要忽略它。

请阅读并分享它们,
它们可能是突发事件。

这样,我们可以确保

没有一个重要的
故事被忽视。

谢谢你。

(掌声)