Tehelka Movie 3gp

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. Sanjay DubeyCategoriesNews fortnightly94,500 (2016)Founder,Year founded1999First issue2000–2003 (website)2004–2007 (tabloid)2007–present day (magazine)CompanyK. Singh (politician)CountryIndiaBased inLanguageEnglish, HindiWebsite,Tehelka (: Sensation) is an Indian news magazine known for its. According to the British newspaper, the Tehelka was founded by, and another colleague who worked together at the magazine after 'an investor with deep pockets' agreed to underwrite their startup. Bahal left Tehelka in 2005 to start – an Indian news website, after which Tehelka was managed by Tejpal through 2013.

In 2013, Tejpal stepped aside from Tehelka after being accused of sexual assault by his employee. Tehelka had cumulative losses of ₹66 crore (US$9.5 million) till 2013, while being majority owned and financed by – an industrialist, a politician and a member of Indian parliament.The magazine began circulating -format newspapers in 2004 and switched to magazine in 2007.

Tehelka 's first sting operation was on a scandal in 2000. In 2001, it won national fame and public support for its sting 'Operation West End'. This 2001 undercover operation recorded and released footage of government officials accepting prostitutes and bribes in a fake arms deal. This caused the resignations of several officials including the then Defence Minister and two presidents of the ruling parties. In 2007, Tehelka published a report against members of the and for their role in the during the.

The report, called ', was based on a six-month sting operation with video footage of the members admitting their role in the violence, along with claims that later proved to be 'boastful lies'. It won the (IPI) India Award for Excellence in Journalism in 2010 and 2011.

Main article:In 2001, Tehelka did its first major sting investigation called '. It involved Mathew Samuel and Bahal, filming how they bribed several defence officials and politicians from the then-ruling -led (National Democratic Alliance) Indian government, posing as arms dealers.

Charging a commission from defence deals is illegal in India. They started their investigation in August 2000 because of hearing rumours of middlemen getting rich in such deals in the 1980s. They created a fake British company based in, London called 'West End'.

Bahal and Samuel then found out that the Indian army would be interested in obtaining. They printed business cards and photographs of particular camera models in Tehelka's office in suburban Delhi and Samuel did the main dealings.They initially had to bribe junior officials in the defence ministry for amounts ranging from ₹10,000 (US$140) to ₹60,000 (US$870), to help them in securing deals with several middlemen. These middlemen said they 'fixed' deals before involving jets and artillery; Samuel and Bahal recorded these conversations using hidden cameras. They dealt with President Jaya Jaitley (The then Defence Minister belonged to this party), whom they paid ₹300,000 (US$4,300), and she agreed to tell Fernandes about them. After bribing other officials, they were introduced to the then (BJP) President who accepted ₹150,000 (US$2,200) as a 'small new year's gift'. Laxman recommended they meet, who was the to.The operation took seven and a half months with Tejpal later saying that the total amount they paid in bribes was ₹1.5 million (US$22,000). The deals were in expensive hotels and few officials asked for branded whisky.

In this whole operation, they recorded around 100 hours of video footage.Six months after Tehelka had made public its investigations, acquired and published transcripts of the video tapes. It showed that as part of the investigations, the reporters hired prostitutes to serve the officials. This raised ethical questions about the methods used. Tejpal later issued a statement denying that any of its women staff were provided as prostitutes. Politicians of the ruling parties called for the journalist's arrests for supplying prostitutes and questioned their ethics. Tejpal called that part of the investigation as a 'needed transgression'.

The public and majority of their competitors supported them; concluded that the issue of ethics 'pales before the sleaze their team has dug up', called it a 'turning point in Indian journalism' but The Indian Express criticised the methods used by the Tehelka team. Tejpal received death threats and was given police protection. His reporters said that their 'extraordinary methods' were for the larger public and national interest.V S Naipal held a news conference and met the then Deputy Prime Minister.

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Naipal told the media, 'This thing that has happened to Tehelka has been profoundly disappointing to me, It comes from another era. It serves no purpose. It seems to me it will profoundly damage the country.'

In 2004, the CBI registered cases against Jaitley, Laxman and others in the army and the Ministry of Defence. In 2012, Laxman was sentenced to four years in jail by additional sessions Judge Kanwal Jeet Arora for this case. Author and journalist wrote a non-fiction book in 2009 on this incident, called.

'The Truth: Gujarat 2002' (2007). Office of the Registrar of Newspapers for India.

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Pp. 78–79., Quote: 'The moral authority of the journalist to test integrity of others came into focus in discussions following the arrest of Tejpal. In the same breath that his contribution to journalism by way of 'alternative mainstream' that defied the tyranny of mediocre barriers of stasis and conformism was recalled, so also was the story recounted of Tejpal's inability to sustain it and how advertisers and the very corporate construct that Tehelka sought to expose were allowed to influence content (Bal 2013; Sengupta 2013; Shruthjith 2013; Simha 2013; Thakur 2013).' . Ellen Barry (22 November 2013).

The New York Times. Retrieved 24 November 2013., Business Standard (November 28 2013). Sruthijith KK (23 November 2013). Economic Times.

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^ Sundaram, Ravi (2015). 'Publicity, Transparency, and the Circulation Engine: The Media Sting in India'.

Current Anthropology. University of Chicago Press. 56 (S12): S300–S304. ^ Usha M. Rodrigues; Maya Ranganathan (2014). SAGE Publications.

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