March 26, 2001
Issue


 

COVER
   

Shamed And Crippled
With Tehelka.com's spy-camera taking a heavy political toll after the damning revelations of corruption in defence deals, the beleaguered Atal Bihari Vajpayee Government will have an uphill task restoring its credibility and undoing the damage to its image.

BJP: Old Hype

Interview:
Bangaru Laxman

Jaya Jaitly:
Jhola To Purse

Opposition: On A Roll

INDIA TODAY-ORG-MARG Poll: Outraged !

Defence Establishment
: Surgery For Graft


Interview: G. Fernandes

Barak Missiles:
Off The Mark


Tehelka:
Sting Theory


Highlights Of The Findings

Rakesh Kumar Jain: Gasbag Man

 

 
STATES
   

Wheeling A Good Deal
The battle for BALCO degenerates into a political chess match between Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Ajit Jogi, and Union Disinvestment Minister Arun Shourie. Jogi holds most of the aces at the moment--but will he play them all when it could mean loss of investments to the state?

 

 
STATES
   

The New Targets
The 60,000 policemen in Kashmir are caught in a dilemma. On the one hand, they are the target of militant attacks, and, on the other, the Army sees them with suspicion. It is not just themselves, but their families that the policemen worry about as they struggle to battle militancy and falling morale.

 

 
ECONOMY
   

Crisis Of Confidence While stock prices haven't recovered since the collapse of March 2, the panic has spread from Mumbai to Kolkata. Underlying the fear is a deepening fear of the Securities and Exchange Board of India's will or capacity to regulate the stockmarkets.

 

 
SPORTS
 

Escape to Victory
Down and virtually out, India create a miracle at the Eden Gardens to stun the Australians and break their winning streak.

 

 
THE ARTS
 

Mixing Metaphors Music, dance, and tourism synthesise in the famed textile centre of Maheshwar to provide sustainable synergies for its growth.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
  Home  
 

COVER STORY: TEHELKA

Sting Theory

Highlights Of The Findings
Rakesh Kumar Jain:
Gasbag Man

The phone's ringing off the hook at the Tehelka.com office. Ringing at the rate of six a minute as everyone, but everyone, wants to talk to the man of the moment, Tarun Jit Tejpal. National Public Radio has called from Washington. So has a former president of the students' union at Jawaharlal Nehru University. And journalists of course, by the dozen, everyone from Time magazine onward.

When the man everyone's waiting for finally strides in he's talking into, what else, his mobile. "All we've done is follow a story through to its logical end," he says. But it's clear that this is his moment of glory: every journalist's dream of delivering a story with enough punch to stir the system.

In a city where innuendo flows faster than the Yamuna, Tejpal seems a bit perplexed by the whisper campaign that's underway. Who funds Tehelka.com? Was this a young dotcom's cheap but sure-shot way-complete with double exclamation marks-to ensure fame? Were journalistic ethics compromised? Were the tapes doctored? How much has been edited out?

Tejpal says he's got nothing to hide. He sees nothing ethically wrong in his methods: "Nobody was going to admit they were taking money. This was the only way."

 

DETECTIVE.COM: Bahal (left) and Tejpal spent eight months and Rs 21 lakh on the story

 

The website is only one part of a media company called Buffalo Networks. In March last year, Tejpal, then managing editor for Outlook magazine, and journalist Aniruddha Bahal-who along with Mathew Samuel broke the defence scandal story-were still riding high on the match-fixing story that was their scoop. Along with Tejpal's brother Minty, a former ad copywriter, the two decided to float a media company. While the majority of its shares-Tejpal says nearly 70 per cent-are held by the three promoters, Tejpal's college pal Shankar Sharma, director with First Global, a stock broking firm, owns another 14.5 per cent. The rest, says Tejpal not giving any names, is held by various investors. Its board of directors comprises such celebrities as Amitabh Bachchan, V.S. Naipaul and Khushwant Singh.

Tehelka.com was the first of Buffalo's products. The company also has a books division. Its first and so far only title Fallen Heroes is, in the words of its publicity blurb, the "sensational undercover investigation" into the "world of match-fixing and cricketing icons who have betrayed our trust". There is a TV division that will produce entertainment and news programmes for various channels. There's a design division that, according to Expressindia.com, recently bagged a $2 million order from firms in the United Kingdom and west Asia. Finally, the company plans to introduce its first music artist in May this year.

 

The beauty of Tehelka's spycam was its simplicity. It yielded a rivetting 270 minutes.

So where's the money coming from? There are no apparent ads, except for one in-house ad and another for Naturence, cricketer Manoj Prabhakar's beauty products company. Prabhakar of course had collaborated with Bahal in secretly filming tapes of the match-fixing saga (later the CBI implicated him too in cricket's rigging scandal). Says Tejpal, "We're still in the investment stage. It'll be a while before we actually start making money."

Right now the company is in the second stage of its funding: the first round of funding amounted to around $1 million. Tejpal isn't forthcoming about who he's talking to considering nothing's been finalised. But he denies a rumour that Zee's Subhash Chandra has bought 26 per cent, adding at the same time that he is indeed talking to Zee about funding. He also adds that Kerry Packer's Indian venture had shown some interest but has since backed off.

 

Eye Spy

  The most popular spy cameras are buttoncams, watchcams or pencams, all of which are very small. With the front aperture of the lens being about 1 mm in diameter, these cameras are ideal for covert operations. A wire connects the camera to a matchbox-sized transmitter which sends video signals to a recorder which could be stationed even 75 to 100 yards away. Estimated cost: between Rs 60,000 and Rs 2.5 lakh.

By Tejpal's reckoning, the company spent some Rs 21 lakh to chase the defence story: Rs 10.8 lakh as bribes and pay-offs and more or less the same amount in newsgathering expenses spread over eight months. But the beauty of the defence scandal story-as with the match-fixing story-is its simplicity.

Rumours of defence dealers running the corridors of power are old hat. All that Tehelka did was equip itself with a spycam, set up a fictitious company called West End International (its India rep Alvin D'Souza was none other than Bahal) and it was in business. Only four people-the two correspondents, Bahal and Mathew Samuel, and the two Tejpal brothers-were in the picture when the team began working on the story in August 2000.

Five months later a secondary team began sifting through the footage and transcribing what would eventually emerge as 270 minutes of tape. The unedited version meanwhile will be made available for an official inquiry or probe when that comes.

As for stories about suppressing the involvement of certain political heavyweights or even of "more to come", Tejpal dismisses these, even as Samuel in Thiruvananthapuram talks of Rs 1,300-crore deals involving the home minister. The tapes, says Tejpal, contain a lot of loose allegations made by arms dealers. Since Samuel was away when the story broke, he didn't really know which parts had been edited and which hadn't. Still, it does seem strange that a key reporter should not have been in Delhi when the story went public. Tejpal says Samuel's on assignment.

Conspiracy theories will inevitably dog a story like this but there's no denying that Tehelka's got itself a whopper of a story. One that will not only endow it with the sort of shine that made journalists crusaders through much of the 1980s but also ensure more page views: according to Tehelka's webmaster the number of hits has gone up by 10 times to 30 million since the story broke (seven million in the first eight hours alone).

Whether this will translate into an infusion of fresh funds for the venture is another matter. For now Tehelka-which shares its name with a B-grade Dharmendra film of the early 1990s that dealt with, ironically, corrupt defence officers-seems content with its moment of glory.



 

 
 
 
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DESPATCHES
 

A bloody crackdown on Naxalites in the south-eastern fringes of Uttar Pradesh proves that only developmental programmes, not guns, can help fight the menace. INDIA TODAY's Special Correspondent Subhash Mishra explains why in
Despatches.

 

 
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