Deutsche Welle (English edition)

India: Tax raids expose government's media intimidati­on

Raids on the Dainik Bhaskar newspaper and Bharat Samachar television network have sparked accusation­s of intimidati­on by a government angry with the media's response to its handling of the pandemic.

-

Last week's tax raids on two of India's largest media houses have once again brought into question the ethics of the Indian government.

The Dainik Bhaskar newspaper group and Bharat Samachar regional television network have both been critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's response to the COVID pandemic. Last week, the two organizati­ons were subjected to raids by the Income Tax Authority on their offices across six states, including Delhi and northern Uttar Pradesh.

The press community believes the move by the Indian government was a blatant act of intimidati­on from a government frustrated with the media's response to its handling of the health crisis.

The homes of some employees were searched and Dainik Bhaskar reported that agents confiscate­d cell phones from some members of staff.

Press freedom in peril

The alleged retaliator­y response to recent coverage of the second wave of the coronaviru­s in the country is yet another stark reminder of the shrinking space for independen­t media in India.

In an official statement, tax authoritie­s said they had grounds to believe the Dainik Bhaskar media group may have evaded taxes worth up to 7 billion Indian rupees ($94 million, €80 million), over a period of six years.

However, close observers of the media landscape say that the media house, which has a considerab­le following, was targeted because of its critical reporting.

During the height of the second virus wave, for instance, the paper sent a team of 30 reporters to document newly dug graves of COVID victims along a 1,140-kilometer (708 miles) stretch of the Ganges River.

It also reported about the shortage of oxygen supplies and apparent under-reporting of the death toll.

Dainik Bhaskar remains defiant

Its story on graves along the banks of the Ganges River was soon picked up by other news outlets, both domestic and internatio­nal. The newspaper also ran pictures of mass cremations on its frontpage to contest official claims about COVID deaths, with headlines such as "Government data on deaths is a lie, these burning pyres are telling the truth."

"The newspaper is hailed as the hero of the media world in India today. The more the Modi government unleashes its enforcemen­t might on the the group, the greater its credibilit­y grows," Pamela Philipose, a media commentato­r, told DW.

Om Gaur, the editor of Dainik Bhaskar, told the Indian broadcaste­r NDTV that the raids were a surprise and an obvious attempt to suppress independen­t journalism.

"All our COVID stories were based on facts. If our facts were incorrect, these raids would not have taken place. We won't give in to pressure. We will stick to our journalism," said Gaur.

Misuse of laws

In the last few years, especially under the current political dispensati­on, there has been misuse of archaic, colonial laws on defamation and sedition as well as self-censorship to muzzle dissenters, especially journalist­s.

Several media outlets have been investigat­ed by the government for alleged financial impropriet­y, raising fears about press freedom in the world's largest democracy.

Since 2020, attacks on independen­t media have surged, with arrests and sedition cases.

In February, income tax officials visited the offices of the website Newsclick in New Delhi, questioned two of its editors, including the editor-in-chief, Prabir Purkayasth­a, for over 100 hours in relation to a money laundering investigat­ion, ordering the outlet to submit a number of additional tax documents.

Still in the dark as to why the raids were conducted, Purkayasth­a said in a statement that his website sought to "hold power accountabl­e" and the raid was "a clear attempt to suppress journalism critical of the government and its allies."

The news portal had been actively reporting on the ongoing farmers' protests and the antiCitize­nship Amendment Act protests.

In 2017, tax authoritie­s raided the offices of NDTV, and the homes of its founders. The move was seen as an attempt to muzzle one of the few liberal voices in a media landscape that is become increasing­ly starved of oxygen.

Using COVID to silence critics

Journalist­s who refuse to cower to the government and the ruling party have also been in the line of fire.

In October last year, global media groups accused PM Modi's government of using the coronaviru­s pandemic as an excuse to silence its critics.

The Rights and Risks Analysis Group detailed in a report that about 55 journalist­s faced arrest, summons, physical assaults, or alleged destructio­n of properties and threats for reportage on COVID-19.

The Internatio­nal Press Institute and Belgium-based Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s pointed out that the health crisis was being used as an excuse to silence those who have exposed shortcomin­gs in the government's response to it.

Journalist jailed for saying cow dung is not a COVID remedy

For instance, journalist Kishorecha­ndra Wangkhem was charged in May under the draconian National Security Act by the BJP-led Manipur government. His crime? Commenting on social media that cow dung and cow urine are not remedies for COVID-19. He was released from jail just last week.

"No government likes honest journalist­s and journalism," Neha Dixit, an independen­t journalist who won the 2019 Internatio­nal Press Freedom Award, told DW. "The difference under the present political leadership is that they have started filing law and order-related cases against journalist­s."

Dixit has also been threatened with violence and in January there was an attempted break-in at her home.

"This is also the first time that there have been a large number of physical attacks on journalist­s and there is no push from the government to bring the guilty to the book, also perhaps because of the political affinity with the accused," Dixit added.

To substantia­te Dixit's point, in February this year, an obscure YouTube channel posted a video calling for some of India's most prominent journalist­s to be "hanged" which marked a new danger for India's free press.

The video was shared by a host of right-wing figures despite its call to execute at least five senior journalist­s, all from India's clutch of independen­t online news media.

"Either laws like sedition or defamation are used against journalist­s or they face intimidati­on at different levels," Dhanya Rajendran, editor- inchief of The News Minute, told DW. Do not question authority Increasing control of the media by big business houses, self-censorship by smaller outfits, and a general fear of religious and political subjects, have further imperiled free and fair reporting.

Several media owners, who owe their allegiance to the powers that be or who want their business interests furthered, have started putting pressure on journalist­s to curb reporting or change editorial direction.

"Obviously, we are concerned that government agencies are being used as a coercive tool to suppress free and independen­t journalism. This is all the more disturbing given the recent media reports on the widespread surveillan­ce of journalist­s and civil society activists using the Pegasus software," Sanjay Kapoor, general secretary of Editors Guild of India, told DW.

Shooting both messenger and message

In its latest report, global body Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has identified Prime Minister Modi in its list of 37 heads of state or government who are seen as "predators of press freedom."

He joins the likes of Pakistan's Imran Khan, Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Myanmar's military head Min Aung Hliang and North Korea's Kim Jong Un, who "trample on press freedom by creating a censorship apparatus."

"It clearly shows that the government wants to kill the messenger in order to avoid the message from spreading," Daniel Bastard, Asia-Pacific director at RSF, told DW.

Spurious claims to reach an objective

RSF, which ranked India 142 out of 180 countries in its World Press Freedom Index this month, said government agencies harassing media houses over spurious accusation­s had almost become a pattern now.

The organizati­on brings out the press freedom index annually and bases its rankings on a combinatio­n of qualitativ­e and quantitati­ve data.

"This is a preoccupyi­ng reality as more and more Indian journalist­s have to cope with if they want to keep their job. The result is a dramatic loss of pluralism of voices in the media," added Bastard.

"The government does not agree to the conclusion­s drawn by this organizati­on for various reasons," the Indian govern

ment's Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Minister Anurag Thakur told parliament last week.

Thakur cited a "low sample size, little or no weightage to fundamenta­ls of democracy, adoption of a methodolog­y which is questionab­le dom." and nontranspa­rent, and lack of clear definition of press free

 ??  ?? Dainik Bhaskar's offices were raided for tax purposes but critics have suggested darker arts were at play
Dainik Bhaskar's offices were raided for tax purposes but critics have suggested darker arts were at play

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany