Kuwait Times

India makes u-turn on TV ban over New Delhi riot coverage

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NEW DELHI: The Indian government backtracke­d yesterday after slapping a 48-hour ban on two TV channels for what officials called biased coverage of New Delhi riots. A blackout of Asianet News and MediaOne was ordered on Friday but lifted after an outcry from opposition groups and protests by the channels to the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry. Informatio­n minister Prakash Javadekar said Prime Minister Narendra Modi requested the ban be revoked on learning of it. “Our basic belief is that press freedom is essential in a democratic set-up,” Javadekar told reporters when asked about the move.

A government order had accused the channels of covering last month’s deadly riots in the capital “in a manner that highlighte­d the attack on places of worship and siding towards a particular community”. At least 50 people were killed in Delhi’s worst sectarian violence in decades, over two-thirds of them from India’s Muslim minority, according to hospital lists. Mosques were burnt and vandalized along with Hindu-owned shops and at least 15 Hindus were killed.

‘Undemocrat­ic’ MediaOne called the ban “a blatant attack on free and fair reporting” and an “unpreceden­ted and undemocrat­ic action”. It also said it was penalized for criticizin­g Delhi police and the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, a Hindu nationalis­t group close to Modi’s ruling right-wing party. Indian government­s have long been sensitive to media coverage and criticism, analysts say. In 2016, officials banned NDTV’s Hindi-language channel for 24 hours for broadcasti­ng details of an attack by militants on an air force base.

The government also banned Qatar-based channel Al Jazeera for five days in 2015 for displaying a map of the disputed Kashmir region deemed incorrect. Last year a journalist was jailed over derogatory comments made on social media against a chief minister from Modi’s party. The latest ban sparked an outcry from opposition parties. “All democratic minds should unite to voice against this fascist decision,” Ramesh Chennithal­a, a senior member of the Congress party, said on Facebook. —AFP

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