New Delhi: The Telegraph has run a report on its front page essaying a chain of events in which Union minister Babul Supriyo – currently at the centre of controversy over his role in spurring unrest at Kolkata’s Jadavpur University – reportedly rang the paper’s editor and in the course of demanding an apology for a headline and caption, used choice expletives.
“Around 7.50pm, the minister called Telegraph editor R. Rajagopal on his mobile phone during the evening news meeting. Supriyo introduced himself and said he would like an “amicable apology”,” the report on the paper reads. The report says that upon the editor’s insistence that the paper had nothing to apologise for, the BJP leader grew incensed and said the paper had “f***ing sold out.”
Also read: Unrest At Jadavpur University After Students Clash With Babul Supriyo
Since the events at JU on Thursday, in which Supriyo was allegedly heckled by students, photos and accounts have emerged which show that Supriyo himself could have indulged in a degree of violence against the students. While there have been reports on him issuing explicit threats to sloganeering students, along with widely circulated videos where he can be heard haranguing university vice-chancellor Suranjan Das, The Wire has not been able to verify those independently.
Telegraph, on Friday, ran a photo in which Supriyo is seen pulling at the shirt of a young man on campus. The headline the paper chose was “Babull at JU”. The caption mentions that the Supriyo was “grabbing a student by the shirt”.
The Telegraph’s front page on Friday.
This was what Supriyo evidently took exception to. All of Saturday, the MoS for the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change tweeted fervently against what he labelled as misrepresentation of the role he played at JU.
He wrote that if the newspaper, “doesn’t apologise tomorrow for their false biased reporting, I’ll sue them.” He first tagged the UK Telegraph in his tweet and rectified it with a subsequent tweet.
Supriyo carried the demand for an apology forward by making a call to editor Rajagopal, reports Telegraph. At first, Supriyo reportedly complained that he had not elbowed anyone. His tweet (above) also uses the term ‘elbowing’. When Rajagopal sought to clarify that the newspaper had made no such claim, Supriyo allegedly shifted focus on the pun on his name in the headline, stressed that he was a “Central minister,” asked the editor if he was a gentleman before unleashing the expletives.
According to the paper, Rajagopal told him that no apology would be forthcoming and that Supriyo should send the paper a legal notice or letter should he demand legal action be taken.
Also read: The Fate of Press Freedom in India Over the Years
Supriyo allegedly also told Rajagopal that he was recording the conversation. The call was reportedly cut by Rajagopal.
Supriyo’s slew of tweets, since the conversation ended, corroborate many of the claims made by the paper on the salient points of the conversation. The minister has, however, said the editor abused him in “filthy lingo”.
He also shifted focus of his grouse from the use of the term “elbowed” to “grabbing the shirt”.
The singer turned politician has also retweeted several comments on the need for regulation of media.