Business Standard

Never touched a rupee of black money, says Roy

Media community rallies around ND TV, critic is es attack on free press

- N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N

New Delhi Television (NDTV) founder Prannoy Roy on Friday said he and his company had never touched black money or bribed anyone. In a passionate speech before hundreds of journalist­s at the Press Club of India, Roy said the media group “will answer every one of the false charges”, but sought a timebound process. “We ask for transparen­cy and a deadline,” he said.

“I commit to you, me and Radhika (Roy) and NDTV have never touched one rupee of black money, never bribed one person in our lives,” Roy said. Alleging that institutio­ns such as the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) were being abused by the politician­s, Roy said, “This is not about NDTV. They are trying to tell you, ‘We will fix you, even if you are innocent’.” Roy spoke after an impressive array of eminent personalit­ies and senior journalist­s spoke out against what was seen as the government’s attempt to muzzle free press.

Senior journalist H K Dua began the proceeding­s comparing the situation to the times of the Emergency and Rajiv Gandhi’s move to bring the defamation Bill. “It’s not just NDTV; if you don't fall in line, you will meet the same fate. That’s the message. If this is not attack on freedom of press (what is)?” Dua asked.

Former Union minister and editor Arun Shourie began by thanking Prime Minister Narendra Modi for bringing all friends of the media together. In a speech that was oozing with trademark sarcasm and humour, Shourie said, “They are using instrument of overt pressure, they have made NDTV example of that. This will intensify in the coming months.”

Encouragin­g journalist­s to give it back to the trolls by getting active on social media, Shourie said if journalist­s thought they could get away by giving concession­s to people in power by carrying their columns and interviews, their hopes are misplaced. He urged journalist­s to “redouble” their efforts in doing critical coverage.

“We have only three protection­s — our solidarity, the court and the protection of our own readers and viewers,” he said.

Senior lawyer and constituti­onal expert Fali Nariman pointed out several lapses in the process followed by the CBI in conducting the raids. Asserting that freedom of speech was all about freedom after speech, Nariman said, “The manner and circumstan­ces of the CBI raids give me reason to believe that it was an unjustifie­d attack on press and freedom of media.”

He said according to the freedom of press enshrined in Article 19 of the Constituti­on, media owners are entitled an opportunit­y to give their replies before such actions are initiated against them.

According to him, the CBI should have ideally directed the complainan­t to file a criminal case since it seemed more a dispute between two private persons. On Monday, the CBI had conducted raids at the residence of Roy after registerin­g a case based on a complaint by Quantum Securities, a firm run by Delhi-based stock broker and NDTV shareholde­r Sanjay Dutt.

Several speakers pointed to this timeline as evidence of the government’s intentions. The who’s who of the capital’s media community was present at the Press Club.

 ?? PHOTO:PTI ?? NDTV founder Prannoy Roy addresses a meeting at Press Club of India in New Delhi on Friday against the CBI raids on his news channel in an alleged financial fraud case
PHOTO:PTI NDTV founder Prannoy Roy addresses a meeting at Press Club of India in New Delhi on Friday against the CBI raids on his news channel in an alleged financial fraud case

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