Akal Takht slams media blackout over Bhagwant Mann video FIR
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Akal Takht, the apex temporal authority of the Sikh faith, has formally condemned what it described as a deliberate media blackout surrounding the Gurugram Police FIR in the controversial video case linked to Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann. The rebuke, issued through a formal letter to press clubs and journalist unions, comes amid mounting concern that regional and Punjabi-language media houses have suppressed coverage of a matter the institution considers of grave public importance.
Background: What the Video Case Involves
A widely circulated video purportedly shows a man resembling Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann engaged in objectionable conduct, with images of Sikh Gurus and slain militant leader Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale visible in the footage. The video triggered significant outrage within the Sikh community and prompted the Akal Takht to take the unprecedented step of declaring Mann 'guru dokhi' (one who betrays the Guru) and 'Khalsa panth Virodhi' (anti-Khalsa panth) earlier this month.
The Gurugram Arrests and FIR
In a significant legal development on Tuesday, Haryana Police arrested two individuals following a complaint filed by a forensic expert who alleged he was offered money to fabricate a favourable forensic report on the disputed video. The FIR, registered by Gurugram Police, marked a notable escalation in the case. However, according to the Akal Takht's letter, several media organisations — particularly Punjabi print and digital platforms — remained conspicuously silent on both the arrests and the institution's official position.
Akal Takht's Formal Rebuke to the Media
The Akal Takht addressed its formal letter to the Press Clubs of Chandigarh, Jalandhar, and Amritsar, as well as various journalist unions across Punjab. The letter underlined that the Secretariat of the Akal Takht promptly disseminates its official decisions and reactions on all matters concerning the Sikh community, and that an official statement on the video issue had been released on Tuesday.
'Regrettably, a large section of the media has not published the official side of the Secretariat of Akal Takht Sahib on this serious matter,' the letter stated. It further invoked the media's constitutional standing, describing it as the 'fourth pillar of democracy' with a sacred duty to report significant public events without fear or favour. 'If the media does not publish pro-people news under any pressure, it is not fulfilling its responsibility properly,' the letter added.
Wider Significance
This is the first time in recent memory that the Akal Takht has formally written to press bodies accusing them of suppressing coverage of an issue directly involving a sitting state chief minister. The move signals that the institution views the alleged media silence not merely as an editorial lapse but as a failure of democratic accountability. Notably, the case intersects sensitive religious imagery, political authority, and questions of forensic integrity — a combination that critics argue makes transparent reporting all the more essential.
As the forensic investigation and legal proceedings continue, the Akal Takht's intervention is expected to keep pressure on both the media and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government in Punjab. The outcome of the Gurugram Police investigation and any further forensic findings will be closely watched by Sikh organisations and political observers alike.