Los Angeles Times

India targets journalist­s as virus spreads

Reporters covering COVID lack access to informatio­n and risk arrest and harassment.

- By Neha Thirani Bagri Thirani Bagri is a special correspond­ent.

MUMBAI, India — Four days after India locked down in late March to f ight the spread of the coronaviru­s, Jagat Bains got a call from a group of migrant working families in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh. With constructi­on work having ground to a halt, the laborers had run out of money and their children were going hungry.

Bains, a freelance reporter for a regional television channel, drove to the encampment and found two dozen people hunkered down in shanties consisting of plastic sheets held together by bamboo. They said that local officials had failed to give them food they were supposed to receive under a government relief program, and that when they tried to fetch water, police beat them because they were violating the lockdown.

Bains’ report on the workers was posted on the YouTube channel of a small local news outlet March 30. That evening, he learned that police were opening an investigat­ion against him on criminal charges including spreading false informatio­n.

“They are trying to pressure and harass any journalist who was writing stories criticizin­g them,” said Bains, 33.

Amid the escalating COVID- 19 crisis, Indian journalist­s reporting on government mismanagem­ent of the pandemic are facing prosecutio­n or intimidati­on from authoritie­s while at the same time being hindered by restrictio­ns on accessing informatio­n.

Since March, at least 55 journalist­s have been arrested, investigat­ed or questioned by police across India in connection with their COVID- 19 reporting or for alleged lockdown violations, according to a report by the Rights and Risks Analysis Group, a New Delhi- based think tank.

Authoritie­s have opened criminal investigat­ions against many of the journalist­s for allegedly publishing false reports and for violating the Epidemic Diseases Act, a colonial- era law that grants the state sweeping powers. In conjunctio­n with other statutes, the law has been cited by authoritie­s threatenin­g journalist­s with f ines and up to two years in prison.

“The space for press freedom has been shrinking since the COVID- 19 crisis began in India,” said Daniel

Bastard, Asia- Pacific director at Reporters Without Borders. “Journalist­s have been arrested for talking about the effects of the lockdown on the poorest sections of the Indian population.”

For Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is battling the world’s second- worst coronaviru­s outbreak — with more than 6.5 million people infected and the most new daily infections — controllin­g the media narrative has been a top priority.

On March 25, Modi initiated a nationwide lockdown, widely described as the toughest in the world, stranding hundreds of thou

sands of low- wage migrant laborers without work and with no way to get back to their rural homes.

Hours before the announceme­nt, Modi held a videoconfe­rence with the owners and editors of 20 mainstream news outlets and asked them to publish “inspiring and positive stories” about the pandemic.

A week later, his administra­tion asked the Indian Supreme Court to direct media outlets to publish stories on the disease only after ascertaini­ng the government’s “true factual position.” Although the subsequent order issued by the court did not prohibit independen­t reporting, it has served as a

warning to journalist­s — along with a government Twitter account that tweets “correction­s” to news stories regarded as incorrect.

Sanjoy Ghose, a New Delhi- based lawyer, said the government’s broad legal authority and the court order “empower the government to then embark on this mission of ensuring that journalist­s who are reporting uncomforta­ble issues are booked. They have such vast powers that you even need to declare a formal emergency.”

But most journalist­s have persisted in reporting the news. In April, a month after his original report for the regional channel News18

Himachal, Bains f iled a report based on surveillan­ce recordings showing that private vehicles were crossing state lines in violation of lockdown orders. Days later, he got a call from another group of migrant workers who said they had blocked a highway to protest being denied food by passing government supply trucks. Bains hesitated to cover the story until his editor assured him the channel would support him.

“There was some fear in my mind,” Bains said. “I thought that if I highlight the failings of the government, they might charge me again.”

The day after his report on the protest aired, local off icials finally provided food to the migrants. But that evening he got a call from police who said two more criminal investigat­ions had been opened against him, one for each story.

His curfew waiver was also revoked, making it difficult for him to report until the lockdown was eased May 1. Rohit Malpani, the superinten­dent of police for Baddi district, where Bains is based, did not respond to requests for comment.

Most journalist­s targeted in the crackdown — such as Bains — report for regionalla­nguage media far from the glare of big cities. They have the least protection and fewest resources for legal defense, and their cases have often gone unnoticed by advocacy groups.

In July, Gammat Bhandari, publisher of Parshwabho­omi, a respected regional newspaper in the western state of Maharashtr­a, was arrested at his office after he wrote a story about a police officer who violated travel restrictio­ns. Bhandari was released after a night in custody, but his laptop was seized and hasn’t been returned.

Last month, Parashar Biswas, a newspaper reporter in the northeaste­rn state of Tripura, was beaten by unidentifi­ed individual­s after the state’s top official — a member of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party — criticized “overexcite­d” journalist­s for exaggerati­ng the threat of COVID- 19.

In a case that has drawn outrage from global press freedom groups, Supriya Sharma, executive editor of the news website Scroll. in, was charged with defamation and negligence for reporting on hunger and unemployme­nt in a village near Modi’s parliament­ary constituen­cy of Varanasi.

Such charges rarely bring conviction­s, but India’s slow- moving justice system means that cases can drag on for years.

Critics say the accusation­s and arrests have had a chilling effect on media outlets. Journalist­s say officials are providing little transparen­cy on issues such as access to care, diagnostic testing and health insurance.

Since Modi came to power in 2014, press freedom has declined and India was ranked 142nd out of 180 countries — two spots lower than the previous year — in the 2020 press freedom index compiled by the watchdog group Reporters Without Borders.

“Journalist­s in India have always faced attacks and intimidati­on, but what we’re seeing right now is quite intensifie­d and more brazen,” said Aliya Iftikhar, senior Asia researcher at the internatio­nal Committee to Protect Journalist­s, or CPJ. “There is definitely a different, harder environmen­t for journalist­s under the Modi administra­tion.”

The Indian government has denied muzzling the press. On World Press Freedom Day in May, Prakash Javadekar, the informatio­n minister, tweeted: “Media in India enjoy absolute freedom.”

That month, the CPJ wrote to police in Himachal Pradesh seeking comment on the cases f iled against Bains and two other journalist­s but said it received no reply. Bains said that after pressure from advocacy groups and support from the state’s chief minister, police have not pursued the charges against him.

 ?? Dar Yasin Associated Press ?? I NDIAN journalist­s reporting on government mismanagem­ent of the pandemic have faced prosecutio­n or intimidati­on from authoritie­s. Above, Kashmiri journalist­s shout slogans during a protest in July in Srinagar.
Dar Yasin Associated Press I NDIAN journalist­s reporting on government mismanagem­ent of the pandemic have faced prosecutio­n or intimidati­on from authoritie­s. Above, Kashmiri journalist­s shout slogans during a protest in July in Srinagar.
 ?? Bikas Das Associated Press ?? COMMUTERS in a bus and pedestrian­s on the street wear masks last week in Kolkata. India has been among the most hard- hit countries in the pandemic.
Bikas Das Associated Press COMMUTERS in a bus and pedestrian­s on the street wear masks last week in Kolkata. India has been among the most hard- hit countries in the pandemic.

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