Having fun is no
crime, but not at others' expense.
It is not an advise or a sort of idiom, it is just a caution.
But, how many of us follow it? We are living in a society, where it doesn’t matter who are the scapegoat
but all matter that you had what you wanted. Sorry to see that the tolerance
and feelings are fading from the face of the earth. We end up living in
a ruthless world. People are least bothered about others to achieve personal
gain or glory. Last week we witnessed how two Djs from Australia forced a women to
end her life. The people who are related to any sort of media are dying for
overnight glory which finally it took away an innocent life.
It happened many
times, everyone aware of the circumstances under which Princes Diana
died. In our country we have seen before how renowned journalist Barkha Dutt
of NDTV linked to 2G scam with lobbyist Neera Radia. In recent, how two
editors of a prime channel demanded a whopping hundred crore from a
minister to drop a news item regarding
coal scam. All sorts of media are in a a rotten mess and people around
it needs some soul searching to do.
Jacintha
Saldanha
Jacintha
Saldanha an Indian
from Manglore, she was 46 years, a nurse at the King Edward VII's
Hospital in central London,
answered a call on December 4 morning, with any suspicion. The call was from
the Sydney-based 2Day FM station, whose two DJs pretended to be the
Queen and Prince Charles. Ms Saldanha put them through to a colleague
who provided details of the Duchess's condition.
Ms Saldanha was found unconscious at a nurses'
residence close to the private hospital in Marylebone at about 9.35am and
despite the efforts of paramedics could not be revived. Police said the death
was not being treated as suspicious, and a source said she had taken her own
life. Mental health experts cautioned against any assumptions about factors
contributing to her death. The nurse, a mother of two children, who started
working at the hospital in 2008, is the first member of staff heard to answer
on a recording of the hoax call from presenters Mel Greig and Michael
Christian.
Ms Greig, seeking to impersonate the Queen, asked to
be put through to "my grand-daughter", prompting Ms Saldanha
to pass the phone to another nurse who was looking after the duchess. The
hospital, which is rated as one of London's
best private medical establishments and has a reputation for closely guarding
the privacy of its patients.
In addition to the
inherent humiliation caused by the prank, Saldanha was further
humiliated by the DJs, who gloated that she fell for the "easiest
prank ever made." They never expected their absurdist British accents
to succeed. On the morning of the tragedy they were still gloating on Twitter.
Doing a job is not mean taking an innocent life. It is so painful to think that
how horrifying it was for the woman with a loving husband and two kids to come
to the extreme decision.
The obsession for
the royal family by the Brits should partially blame for the sad
incident. People of Britain
should realize that the members of royal family are not god but a normal
person like others. At the same time royal family too has some responsibility,
instead of enjoying the craze around them, they themselves should make people become
conscious that they are nothing more than an ordinary human.
!!!Who lives with disproportionate of
excuses should prepare to die with the same amount of regrets !!!
No comments:
Post a Comment