The Phnom Penh Post

India’s battered press

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PRESS freedom in India suffered a fresh blow on Monday when the country’s main investigat­ive agency raided homes and offices connected to the founders of NDTV, India’s oldest television news station. The raids mark an alarming new level of intimidati­on of India’s news media under Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The story is a bit tangled, but here’s the gist: The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion says it conducted the raids because of a complaint that NDTV’s founders had caused “an alleged loss” to ICICI, a private bank, related to repayment of a loan. In 2009, ICICI said the note had been paid in full. Not really, the investigat­ors said: A reduction in the interest rate had saddled the bank with a loss – hence the raid.

That doesn’t wash. India’s large corporatio­ns regularly default on debt with nary a peep from authoritie­s. In fact, even as India’s state-owned banks are holding bad debt of about $186 billion, Modi’s government has hesitated to go after big defaulters. But suddenly we have dramatic raids against the founders of an influentia­l media company – years after a loan was settled to a private bank’s satisfacti­on. To Modi’s critics, the inescapabl­e conclusion is that the raids were part of a “vendetta” against NDTV.

Since Modi took office in 2014, jour- nalists have faced increasing pressures. They risk their careers – or lives – to report news that is critical of the government or delves into matters that powerful politician­s and business interests do not want exposed. News outlets that run afoul of the government can lose access to officials. The temptation to self-censor has grown, and news reports are increasing­ly marked by a shrill nationalis­m that toes the government line.

Through all this, NDTV has remained defiant. Last year, its Hindilangu­age station was ordered off the air for a day as punishment for reporting on a sensitive attack on an air base, but it stood by its reporting,

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