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How free is the press in India?

How free is the press in India?


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Firebat

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New Delhi, India - India's Hindu nationalist government has been criticised for silencing dissent and undermining independent media, with critical journalists branded "anti-nationals" or charged under "anti-terror" laws.

Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, press freedom has deteriorated, with India dropping to 142nd place in the list of 180 countries in "the World Press Freedom Index 2020".

Newspapers and television networks critical of the governments have either had their advertisements blocked or their offices raided, and activists have been thrown in jails for organising peaceful protests.

It has resulted in widespread self-censorship on the part of media. A sectarian agenda, critics said, have instead been accorded more prime-time slots in tune with the Hindu nationalist government's right-wing politics.

Modi himself has not conducted a single news conference since becoming prime minister in 2014.

Before an abrupt decision to announce a coronavirus lockdown on March 24, Modi met editors and owners of 20 major media organisations asking them to publish "positive stories". The government also tried to control all aspects of information regarding the coronavirus crisis.

Al Jazeera spoke to Hartosh Singh Bal, political editor of Caravan magazine, on the state of media and democracy in India.

Al Jazeera: How would you describe the state of press freedom in India at the moment?

Hartosh Singh Bal: Well, it's been going from bad to worse for a while. I think ever since Modi took over [in 2014], there's been a deliberate attempt to subvert the whole independence of the media, and dissent has been strictly controlled.

I think just a few hours before the coronavirus lockdown [was announced on March 24], Modi himself spoke to a lot of owners and editors of print [media] across the country, and you've seen the results.

They [media] are basically reporting positive stories on the lockdown, and the migrant crisis was largely ignored. Historian Ram Guha's column was removed from the English newspaper the Hindustan Times, whose owner Modi spoke to. And we are getting a lot of under-reporting on the bad impact of the lockdown and of what is happening in the country.

Al Jazeera: Why do you think media companies are so willing to comply with the government pressure?

Bal: Two things, I think. One is to do with the media landscape. The media ownership by big business and people who have other business interests already had undermined the media even during the times of the previous Congress party-led government.

But Modi after coming to power used this systemically to basically coerce media through indirect means, in terms of ease of doing business for the owners, who have other commercial interests. The government can create roadblocks or deny permissions for other businesses if the reporting is not favourable.

Also, there is a great deal of collusion. There is an ideological belief in many of the owners in whatever this government represents, so there's both coercion and collusion in what is happening. And then the [pro-government] media itself has been used to undermine any other media that speaks up independently.

You have 9 o'clock [prime time] news shows dedicated to journalists, who are called anti-nationals, traitors and left-wing extremists simply because they are critical of the government. So this government has basically managed the media by either making it ineffective or questioning its very purpose through other media which are more amenable to what they [government] want.

Al Jazeera: How dangerous do you think it is to be calling journalists or anyone who criticises the government "anti-national"? Also, the government has charged journalists, especially in Kashmir, under the anti-terror law (UAPA).

Bal: Clearly, it's part of the same process. Kashmir is a particularly dangerous case, the extreme case, the limit case of where India will go with the kind of things Modi is doing. Kashmir was under lockdown in a sense which preceded COVID-19 because the government wanted some political ends met.

And the reporting that came out in the mainstream Indian media was that [Kashmiri] people were actually happy about being locked down in their houses. And this despite all the facts to the contrary, as the foreign media and a few other Indian media reported.

But the mainstream narrative which people in this country believed was the narrative that the government wanted spun. That is what is happening. He [Modi] is creating a fictional world in which people are consuming reality.

And what is actually happening, the shortcomings of the government, even the normal process of democracy in which leadership and political decisions are questioned, is being undermined. There is no constant exchange except through [pro-government] media. So in some senses, the very democratic framework of India, the way it should operate, is today in peril.

Al Jazeera: Indian government leaders love to talk about how India is the world's largest democracy. They say it all the time. But then how does that fit with the state of press freedom in India when the press is such an important part of democracy?

Bal: India today is in the danger of failing to be a constitutional democracy. I'm not claiming that Modi doesn't enjoy democratic support. He does, even today, a huge amount.

But the very idea of constitutional democracy is mandated and functions through the work of institutions that control majoritarian tendencies, control the kind of anti-Muslim sentiments that this government is fomenting.

So constitutional democracy, for it to work, requires the checks and balances of institutions and the press. It may be a democracy in the sense that the majority rules, that the mob rules in some senses, but it is not a constitutional democracy in the real sense today.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...nalist-hartosh-singh-bal-200503182258798.html
 
The first paragraph says it all. You'll just be labelled "anti-nationals" or charged under "anti-terror" laws. Under these circumstances there cannot be free media.
 
The basis of the article on the subject of freedom in India of the press is views of political editor of caravan megazine.... Okay. That's a very strong start.
 
The basis of the article on the subject of freedom in India of the press is views of political editor of caravan megazine.... Okay. That's a very strong start.

However that is not the topic at hand.

Do you feel there is freedom for the press in India? :inti
 
indian media doesn't deserve freedom. It deserves heavy censorship. Also social media accounts should be tied with aadhaar card so that it can be easily traced and access to foreign websites should be restricted.
 
indian media doesn't deserve freedom. It deserves heavy censorship. Also social media accounts should be tied with aadhaar card so that it can be easily traced and access to foreign websites should be restricted.
North Korea much
 
Three Kashmiri photo journalists working with American news agency Associated Press (AP) have won 2020 Pulitzer Prize for striking feature photography exposing atrocities committed by the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi after New Dehli abrogated the territory’s special status under Article 370.

The occupied region is since then pushed under sweeping curfew with internet and phone services shut down across the region.

Despite difficulties to report, the AP photographers Dar Yasin, Mukhtar Khan and Channi Anand found ways to let outsiders see what was happening and now their work has been honoured with the 2020 Pulitzer Prize in Feature Photography.

The Pulitzer Prize – the most prestigious award in journalism – had earlier been postponed for two weeks due to the novel coronavirus. The prize winners were announced virtually on Monday due to the health crisis.

The photographers are honoured for their spectacular images captured during protests, military operations and daily life activities in the occupied valley especially when the region is denied access to internet and phone services under a brutal lockdown enforced by New Delhi since last year.

“Snaking around roadblocks, sometimes taking cover in strangers’ homes and hiding cameras in vegetable bags...then headed to an airport to persuade travellers to carry the photo files out with them and get them to the AP’s office in New Delhi,” the news agency described the impediment of reporting during these crucial times in a statement.

“It was always cat-and-mouse,” Yasin recalled, while adding: “These things made us more determined than ever to never be silenced.”

Yasin and Khan are based in Srinagar, Kashmir’s largest city, while Anand is based in the neighbouring Jammu district.

Whereas Anand shared that the award left him speechless.

“I was shocked and could not believe it,” he said, calling the prize-winning photos a continuation of the work he’s been doing for 20 years with the agency.

The AP's president and CEO Gary Pruitt said that this honour continues AP’s great tradition of award-winning photography.

“Thanks to the team inside Kashmir, the world was able to witness a dramatic escalation of the long struggle over the region’s independence. Their work was important and superb,” he noted.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/286520-th...-win-pulitzer-award-2020-for-kashmir-coverage
 
Mumbai: Aakar Patel, columnist and former executive director of Amnesty International India, has said he was arrested and then let out on bail earlier this week for allegedly posting “offensive” tweets against the Ghanchi community in Gujarat.

The Surat City police registered an FIR against Patel, filed by Purnesh Modi, a ruling Bhartiya Janata Party MLA from Surat West constituency and president of the Samast Gujarati Modhvanik Samaj.

The FIR registered on July 7 states that on June 24 and June 27, Patel had posted three tweets that were objectionable and against the community. Patel has been booked under Sections 153 A, 295 A, 505 (1) B, 505 (1) C, 499 and 500 of the Indian Penal Code. Most of these sections are non-bailable.

The complainant has listed three tweets posted by Patel. In the first two tweets, Patel mentioned that Prime Minister Narendra Modi belonged to the Ghanchi caste, which was added to the Other Backward Caste list in 1999 by then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s regime. Patel goes on to say that the community is “well-off” and is “meat-eating” and that Modi has taken on the manner of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and has turned vegetarian.

In another tweet that followed, Patel has alleged that those involved in the 2002 Sabarmati train carnage belonged to the Muslim Ganchi community.

In this third tweet on June 27, Patel wrote, “The RSS and BJP always profit by the violence against other Indians, especially Muslims. Vajpayee more than Upadhyaya, Advani more than Vajpayee and Modi more than Advani benefitted from this. We have to stop this cycle of violence and blood profit by the RSS and BJP.”

Status of Ghanchi caste

Patel’s claim that the crowd involved in the Godhra train fire of 2002 comprised Ghanchi Muslims has been widely made in in the media before. And it is not clear what offence the police believe his first tweet has caused.

Patel’s claim that Ghanchis were added to the OBC list in 1999 has also been made by other before, though there is some confusion on the matter. P.S. Krishnan in an article in The Wire had stated: “The caste has been on the list of socially and educationally backward classes (SEdBCs) in every part of India – since well before independence in the southern states, and later in the northern states and the Centre – but by its local name. In Gujarat, it is known as Ghanchi, Teli and, in some parts, Ghancha.”

But Patel points to a November 15, 1997 letter by Krishnan himself, in which the then member secretary of the NCBC sought the inclusion of the Ghanchi community, along with its several sub-castes, into the Central list of Backward Classes.

Krishnan was a former secretary to the Government of India and who has been a member of the expert committee on backward classes and member-secretary of the National Commission for Backward Classes, and member of the National Commission for SCs and STs for more than seven decades. Ghanchi is the Gujarati name for the caste known as ‘Teli’ in Hindi, and by different names in other states and languages. It is linked to the traditional occupation of oil-pressing and vending.

Also read: Being Struck By a Thought Is Not an Act of Violence

The Surat police on September 21 recorded Patel’s statement and has now asked for the devices used to tweet to be handed over to the police. Patel says he will soon be handing them over soon.

Although this is not the first time that a criminal case has been registered against the columnist for his vocal stand against the current dispensation, he told The Wire that he was surprised when he was informed about the FIR. “I was surprised it was filed. The tweets are factual,” he responded in an email. Patel says he will defend himself and will be weighing his options to see if the FIR can be quashed.

Just in the recent weeks, Patel has been informed of at least two police cases against him and he says both of them were registered in BJP-ruled states. “The state has become quite intolerant of dissent. This (the tweets) is not an original observation and is not a new phenomenon. What is new is the extreme to which it is taken, especially at a time when the government ought really to be focussed on its work,” Patel shared.

While Patel has been individually targeted, in the past, when he was associated with Amnesty International India, both he and the organisation had been targeted several times by both the state and central machinery. “There are other cases (I have lost count of the number) related to the organisation (Amnesty International India) I was working for until last year, which continues to be harassed through the (Central Bureau of Investigation) CBI, Enforcement Directorate and (Ministry of Home Affairs) MHA and through cases like sedition filed by the (Akhil Bhartiya Vidyarthi Parishad) ABVP,” Patel alleges.

https://thewire.in/rights/aakaar-patel-arrest-tweets-modi-caste
 
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