Indian journalists say they intimidated,
ostracized if they criticize Modi and the BJP
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[April 26, 2018]
By Raju Gopalakrishnan
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India has
constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech and by some measures the
biggest and most diverse media industry in the world. But journalists
here say they are increasingly facing intimidation aimed at stopping
them from running stories critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and
his administration.
At least three senior editors have left their jobs at various
influential media outlets in the past six months after publishing
reports that angered the government or supporters of Modi's Hindu
nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), according to colleagues.
Some reporters, as well as television anchors, have told Reuters they
have been threatened with physical harm, abused on social media and
ostracized by Modi's administration.
In its annual World Press Freedom Index released on Wednesday, the
Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said that India was now
138th-ranked in the world out of 180 countries measured, down two
positions since 2017 and lower than countries like Zimbabwe, Afghanistan
and Myanmar. When the index was started in 2002, India was ranked 80th
out of 139 countries surveyed.
Reporters Without Borders said that "with Hindu nationalists trying to
purge all manifestations of 'anti-national' thought from the national
debate, self-censorship is growing in the mainstream media and
journalists are increasingly the targets of online smear campaigns by
the most radical nationalists, who vilify them and even threaten
physical reprisals."
The group said that "hate speech targeting journalists is shared and
amplified on social networks, often by troll armies."
Spokesmen for the government declined comment on the accusations by
journalists. They did not immediately respond to the Reporters Without
Borders report.
G.V.L. Narasimha Rao, a spokesman for the ruling BJP, said the
allegations of intimidation were far from the truth.
"On the contrary, the BJP has been a victim of the viciousness of large
sections of the media that flourished under the patronage of the
Congress, left and other opposition parties," he told Reuters in
e-mailed comments. "The unabashed bias of these media against the BJP
has not dented our party's political growth."
Some journalists in India say they believe media freedoms are now under
even more threat in the run-up to an election due next year. There have
been some signs of increasing opposition to Modi's economic policies and
to the BJP's muscular Hindu nationalism.
DEATH, RAPE THREATS
"India is going through an aggressive variant of McCarthyism against the
media," said Prannoy Roy, co-founder of NDTV, India's first private news
channel.
NDTV, which some BJP leaders have called the least friendly of India's
television channels, is being investigated for fraud by federal police.
The company has called it a witch-hunt.
The government declined to respond to Roy's comments.
Sagarika Ghose, a columnist with the Times of India newspaper, said she
is viciously trolled for any criticism of the administration.
"The minute I write something, I get droves of hate mail," Ghose said.
"I have had death threats and gang rape threats on social media and also
through letters sent to my home. They know where I live."
Ravish Kumar, a news anchor who has been scathing about the government
in his program for NDTV's Hindi-language channel, said he has been
constantly harassed and threatened by pro-government activists.
"This is very organized," he told Reuters. "They follow me. When I go
out to report, a crowd gathers in 10 minutes."
Reporters Without Borders counted instances of Indian journalists being
killed because of what they write.
"At least three of the journalists murdered in 2017 were targeted in
connection with their work," it said.
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People attend a protest in New Delhi against the killing of Gauri
Lankesh, a senior Indian journalist who, according to police, was
shot dead outside her home by unidentified assailants in the
southern city of Bengaluru, India, September 7, 2017. REUTERS/Cathal
McNaughton/File Photo
Among them was editor and publisher Gauri Lankesh, a vocal advocate
of secularism and critic of right-wing political ideology. A member
of a hardline Hindu group has been arrested for the murder of
Lankesh, who was gunned down outside her home..
Journalists say that media proprietors, who often have multiple
kinds of businesses, are risk averse and can be leaned on by the
government.
"Media proprietors are notorious for reading the tea leaves, they
get a clear sense of the tolerance level of politicians in power,"
said Siddharth Varadarajan, who runs a not-for-profit online news
portal called The Wire. "Government ministers have coined this word,
presstitute, to describe journalists who are unfriendly to them or
who don't do their bidding," he said.
OUT OF FAVOR
Bobby Ghosh, the editor of the Hindustan Times, one of India's
premier broadsheets, quit last September shortly after Modi met the
owner of the newspaper. At least two senior journalists familiar
with the situation said they were told that Modi was unhappy with
Ghosh's editorial policies.
The journalists told Reuters that Ghosh fell out of favor with the
government after he launched a webpage called the Hate Tracker, a
database of violent crimes based on religion, race ethnicity, gender
or sexual orientation.
The database was taken down in October.
Ghosh declined to specify why he quit the Hindustan Times.
The prime minister's office and the newspaper declined requests for
comment on the matter.
A letter published at the time from the government's chief spokesman
Frank Noronha said Modi had met the Hindustan Times chairwoman
Shobhana Bhartia when she invited the prime minister to attend a
conference organized by the newspaper.
"Other related assumptions and insinuations...are baseless and
denied," Noronha said. "The government is committed to the freedom
of the press."
Restrictions on reporting are likely to intensify heading into the
election, said Harish Khare, who resigned as editor-in-chief of the
widely read Tribune newspaper last month.
"It (the government) will use every resource in its command to
pressurize, manipulate, misguide media or any other voice which
seeks to be independent of the government," said Khare, who was for
some time the prime minister's press secretary in the Congress Party
government that lost power to Modi and the BJP in 2014.
He told Reuters his relations with the Tribune's controlling trust
nosedived after the newspaper published a story exposing flaws in
Aadhar, the government's national identity card project.
The newspaper's trust rejected his accusations. "To the contrary,
the Tribune Trust gave an unprecedented award of 50,000 rupees
($765) to the correspondent (who wrote the story) in recognition of
the work," said Officiating Editor K.V. Prasad in an e-mail.
"The editor-in-chief's departure came close to the end of the
tenure."
(Reporting by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Additional reporting by Tom
Lasseter, Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Martin Howell)
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