Muscat Daily

INDIA WITHDRAWS ‘FAKE NEWS’ ORDER AFTER BACKLASH

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New Delhi, India - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday reversed an order to punish journalist­s found guilty of reporting ‘fake news’, after an outcry over a perceived government crackdown on the press.

The media sanctions, issued on Monday, stated that the government would withdraw the official accreditat­ion of any journalist responsibl­e for repeated reporting of ‘fake news’.

India is the latest government to act against what it calls ‘fake news’. Malaysia is passing a law allowing for up to six years in jail for publishing allegedly misleading informatio­n.

The government said it needed to curb the spread of misinforma­tion in the media. But Modi’s office rescinded the directive just hours later amid allegation­s India’s vibrant press was being muzzled.

‘PIB (Press Informatio­n Bureau) Press release titled ‘Guidelines for Accreditat­ion of Journalist­s amended to regulate Fake News’ issued on 02 April 2018 stands withdrawn’, the Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

Under the withdrawn guidelines from the ministry, a first offence would have led to a sixmonth suspension of government accreditat­ion.

A second case would attract a year’s suspension followed by a permanent withdrawal for a third offence.

About 2,000 journalist­s with leading Indian media have a Press Informatio­n Bureau card from the Informatio­n Ministry, which eases access to government department­s and ministries.

The Indian Express newspaper in a front-page headline said, ‘In the name of fake news, govt frames rules to blacklist journalist­s’. ‘Move comes in election year’, it added.

Several journalist­s and activists, while acknowledg­ing the problem of fake news, criticised the government interventi­on.

Audrey Truschke, assistant professor of South Asian history at Rutgers University in the United States, called the sanctions ‘a shocking and unacceptab­le attack’ on freedom of the press in India.

‘It’s not about #fakenews. Rather, it’s about controllin­g a notably vibrant press that often sheds light where those in power would prefer darkness’, Truschke posted on Twitter.

‘Accreditat­ion is not essential to the practice of free journalism but to me this debate is Trumpian in its othering of the media as enemy’, Barkha Dutt, journalist and editor of the Mojo digital news platform, said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Christophe­r Wylie, who worked at Cambridge Analytica, admitted working for some Indian political parties, while testifying before a committee of the British parliament investigat­ing into fake news
(AFP) Christophe­r Wylie, who worked at Cambridge Analytica, admitted working for some Indian political parties, while testifying before a committee of the British parliament investigat­ing into fake news

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