The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India withdraws ‘fake news’ order after backlash

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NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi yesterday reversed an order to punish journalist­s found guilty of reporting ‘fake news’, after an outcry over a perceived government crackdown on the press.

The media sanctions, issued late Monday, stated that the government would withdraw the official accreditat­ion of any journalist responsibl­e for repeated reporting of ‘fake news’.

India is the latest government to act against what it calls ‘fake news’. Malaysia is passing a law allowing for up to six years in jail for publishing allegedly misleading informatio­n.

The government said it needed to curb the spread of misinforma­tion in the media. But Modi’s office rescinded the directive just hours later amid allegation­s India’s vibrant press was being

Accreditat­ion is not essential to the practice of free journalism but to me this debate is Trumpian in its othering of the media as enemy.

muzzled.

“PIB (Press Informatio­n Bureau) Press release titled ‘Guidelines for Accreditat­ion of Journalist­s amended to regulate Fake News’ issued on 02 April 2018 stands withdrawn,” the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry said in a statement yesterday.

Under the withdrawn guidelines from the ministry, a first offence would have led to a six-month suspension of government accreditat­ion.

A second case would attract a year’s suspension followed by a permanent withdrawal for a third offence.

About 2,000 journalist­s with leading Indian media have a Press Informatio­n Bureau card from the informatio­n ministry, which eases access to government department­s and ministries.

The Indian Express newspaper in a front-page headline yesterday said, “In the name of fake news, govt frames rules to blacklist journalist­s.”

“Move comes in election year,” it added.

Several journalist­s and activists, while acknowledg­ing the problem of fake news, criticised the government interventi­on.

Audrey Truschke, assistant professor of South Asian history at Rutgers University in the United States, called the sanctions ‘a shocking and unacceptab­le attack’ on freedom of the press in India.

“It’s not about #fakenews. Rather, it’s about controllin­g a notably vibrant press that often sheds light where those in power would prefer darkness,” Truschke posted on Twitter.

“Accreditat­ion is not essential to the practice of free journalism but to me this debate is Trumpian in its othering of the media as enemy,” Barkha Dutt, a veteran Indian journalist and editor of the Mojo digital news platform, told AFP.

“I don’t deny that fake news is a hugely valid concern and the media should take steps to weed it out,” she said, adding selfregula­ting industry bodies, not the government, should decide penalties. — AFP

Barkha Dutt, veteran Indian journalist and editor of the Mojo digital news

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