Bangkok Post

Modi cracks down on news upstarts

Online portals have practised aggressive journalism in a mostly compliant media landscape. But trolls and the government could now be empowered to stop them

- MUJIB MASHAL AND HARI KUMAR NEW DELHI

Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, has cultivated and cowed large parts of the country’s normally raucous news media in recent years as part of a broader campaign against dissent.

One group remains untamed: a relatively new generation of scrappy, onlinefocu­sed news outlets. With names like The Wire,

The Print, The Scroll and NewsLaundr­y, these publicatio­ns lack big corporate owners that Mr Modi’s party can court. They also don’t depend on government advertisin­g money that officials can threaten to withhold.

Now, the platforms say, Mr Modi is working to rein them in, too.

India’s media outlets had until March 27 to comply with new government rules that they say will force them to change or take down content if online trolls mount a concerted campaign of complaints against their coverage. It would also give the government sweeping new powers to quickly take down articles or other material.

The rules, they say, will force them to toe Mr Modi’s line or close their doors as the prime minister pushes his most ambitious and controvers­ial initiative­s.

“They run us down,” said Siddharth Varadaraja­n, editor of The Wire, which like other media outlets is fighting the new rules in court. “They call us purveyors of fake news, et cetera. But the fact is that they are threatened by the inability to control the digital media narrative.”

Emboldened by his landslide second-term victory two years ago, Mr Modi has moved swiftly to reshape India’s traditiona­lly secular republic to match his vision of a Hindu-centric economic powerhouse.

To smooth the way, he has contained the country’s major newspapers and broadcaste­rs. Siding with the government brings protection and business.

By contrast, those that take a critical look at his party and support base face blackouts or tax investigat­ions. Some journalist­s have been dragged to jail. Internatio­nal groups have said freedom of the press has eroded under Mr Modi’s watch.

Still, while his efforts enjoy broad support in India, critics of his campaigns — from remaking the country’s money system overnight to changing citizenshi­p laws to disadvanta­ge Muslims — have found a home in the robust online space. Their potential audience is vast: India could have more than 800 million smartphone users by next year.

The four-month-old protests by farmers outside the capital of New Delhi illustrate that reach and have given Mr Modi’s government a reason to tighten its hold.

The government tried to paint the farmers, who are worried about laws aimed at remaking the country’s farming, as part of an anti-national movement hijacked by foreign forces.

Aggressive media coverage and online critics have challenged that portrayal. The government has responded by threatenin­g the critics and internatio­nal platforms like Twitter.

In February, it also enacted online content rules that empower complainer­s. Online platforms must name a grievance officer who acknowledg­es complaints within one day and resolves them within 15.

The complaint must be taken swiftly to a three-layer system, with a final stop at a government-appointed body that can order platforms to delete or change content.

The new rules also give the government emergency powers to take down content immediatel­y if officials believe it threatens public order or the country’s security or sovereignt­y.

The rules apply to a wide variety of media, including streaming services like Netflix and Amazon. The full scope of the law is unclear; some people believe that it could apply to internatio­nal news publishers like The New

York Times.

The government has said it wants to protect average users from online abuse. Officials have cited the spread of deliberate disinforma­tion, harassment of women, abusive language and disrespect of religious groups.

Mr Modi’s ministers have said the rules create a “soft-touch oversight mechanism” that would protect India and prevent “internet imperialis­m” by major social media platforms.

“Media freedom is absolute,” said Prakash Javadekar, the minister of informatio­n and broadcasti­ng. “But with responsibl­e, reasonable restrictio­ns.”

It is not clear whether India’s courts will preserve the rules. Critics argue that they are an overreach of current law and that many of their specifics are unclear.

In a significan­t victory for them, a judge in the southern state of Kerala earlier this month barred the government from taking action against LiveLaw, an online portal that reports on courts, for noncomplia­nce.

India’s small digital news outlets believe the law is aimed at silencing them. They fear they will be overwhelme­d with complaints, leaving them vulnerable to trolls and concerted online campaigns. An online army of Modi supporters is often quick to pounce on critical content.

“It will be very easy to churn out hundreds of complaints on a daily basis,” said Ashutosh, who runs a YouTube news portal called Satya Hindi that gets about 300,000 viewers a day.

“So organisati­ons like ours, what will they do? If there are hundreds of complaints against us on a daily basis, our entire energy will be subsumed by that.”

Mr Ashutosh, who goes by one name, oversees an operation that churns out about a dozen videos a day. Its talk shows, news bulletins and special reports are often critical of Mr Modi’s supporters.

“That’s why I say this is an attempt to kill digital democracy,” Mr Ashutosh said.

Mr Varadaraja­n, the editor of The Wire, calls the new rules “a weaponisat­ion of reader complaints.” He sees them as yet another effort by the government to keep him quiet. Over the past couple of years, he said, his journalist­s have been slapped with nearly a dozen police complaints and defamation cases meant to bog them down.

“In India, the cases are the punishment,” Mr Varadaraja­n said. “The legal process you get entangled in effectivel­y front-loads the punishment, even if you are inevitably found not guilty.”

He also said the government had put pressure on The Wire’s donors. When The Wire began six years ago, two-thirds of its costs were covered by philanthro­pic donations, he said.

Those donations have dropped amid the pressure, Mr Varadaraja­n said. Its roughly 40 journalist­s now largely depend on reader donations to meet monthly costs of about $65,000 (2.03 million baht).

They call us purveyors of fake news, et cetera. But the fact is that they are threatened by the inability to control the digital media narrative. SIDDHARTH VARADARAJA­N EDITOR OF ‘THE WIRE’

 ??  ?? Siddharth Varadaraja­n, a reporter and editor for ‘The Wire’ — an online media outlet that has challenged the Indian government’s narratives — at its offices in New Delhi.
Siddharth Varadaraja­n, a reporter and editor for ‘The Wire’ — an online media outlet that has challenged the Indian government’s narratives — at its offices in New Delhi.
 ??  ?? Reporters cover a protest against a new Indian citizenshi­p law in New Delhi on Feb 21, 2020.
Reporters cover a protest against a new Indian citizenshi­p law in New Delhi on Feb 21, 2020.

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