Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Is Youtube India’s next battlegrou­nd for free speech?

‘The blocking of Youtube channels and social media accounts is only the next step in this ongoing trend. The crackdown has been way too transparen­t and unselfcons­cious for any self-respecting democracy’

- DW Murali Krishnan Edited by: Darko Janjevic

MANY journalist­s and commentato­rs in India post content on Youtube in order to avoid pressure from the government. But officials are already tweaking laws to expand their influence to include the platform. Youtuber Dhruv Rathee, a 29-year-old from India living in Europe, has recently set Indian social media humming with a video criticizin­g the direction his country was moving in under Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Rathee’s video “Is India becoming a DICTATORSH­IP?” (sic) has amassed over 24 million views since it was uploaded in late February. In it, the creator cites instances of media control and claims state agencies are being used against opposition leaders, eventually alleging that these efforts are part of a broader trend to silence Modi’s rivals. Rathee has some 17.6 million subscriber­s on his main Youtube channel. And the platform is booming in India — it currently has over 460 million users in the world’s most populous country. By 2029, it is expected to have over 859 million Indian users, according to estimates by Statista, an online platform specializi­ng in data gathering and visualizat­ion. As more and more people turn to Youtube to get news, more journalist­s are also migrating to the platform to cover Indian news and politics, hoping to find a way out of India’s more traditiona­l and polarized media landscape.

NEWSROOMS ‘DIMINISHED’: The space for independen­t reporters in India’s newsrooms has been shrinking for a while. Independen­t journalist Ravish Kumar, one of the country’s best-known media personalit­ies, says many journalist­s have been ideologica­lly transforme­d and are increasing­ly influenced by the state.

“Even if there is a political change, it will not change the situation in the media. The way the newsroom has been diminished, there has been a cascading effect in local newsrooms across states in India as well,” Kumar, who used to work for the mainstream NDTV media channel, told DW. He is now a one-man media company and now boasts 8 million subscriber­s on Youtube where he launched his channel in October 2022. “Mainstream media does a banal analysis of data and there is very little factual analysis of the prime minister’s speeches. There is only a reproducti­on of biases, which has been done in the last few elections,” Kumar said.

TWEAKING LAWS TO CONTROL MESSAGING:

Recently, however, the government has been pushing amendments to existing media laws. The laws include the Telecommun­ications Bill of 2023, the draft Broadcasti­ng Services (Regulation) Bill of 2023, and the Digital Personal Data Protection Act of 2023. Critics say that officials want to have more control over what can be posted on the internet. Last week, Youtube removed the channel of digital Hindi news outlet “Bolta Hindustan,” which had close to 300,000 subscriber­s. Youtube refused to give any reasons for the suspension, but some reports indicate it was done on instructio­ns from the Indian government. The move also comes just months after the “Bolta Hindustan” handle was suspended on Instagram. “The government has a way of getting to you,” political satirist Akash Banerjee told DW. “You cannot fully be yourself. Of course, there is self-censorship here, too. One must be controlled, as I know the knock on my door can happen, too,” added the host of the political satire channel The Deshbhakt (The Patriot) on Youtube.

BJP BOASTS ITS OWN INFLUENCER­S:

Indian authoritie­s blocked 104 Youtube channels and 45 videos from the beginning of 2021 to October 2022, under the provisions of the Informatio­n Technology (IT) Act, which can be invoked to restrict access to content in the interest of the sovereignt­y and integrity of the country. The government has also repeatedly clashed with X, formerly Twitter.

Last year, social media platforms were directed to block a BBC documentar­y that implicated Modi in the 2002 Gujarat riots. Sharing links and clips from the documentar­y was banned, and the government deployed police to stop students from screening the film. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has also tried to rope in Youtube and Instagram influencer­s and gain their help to promote its campaigns and shape voters’ opinions ahead of the general election.

‘THE CRACKDOWN HAS BEEN WAY TOO TRANSPAREN­T’:

Digital players have been “doing more public interest journalism, news, and commentary than legacy media over the past several years,” said Abhinandan Sekhri, co-founder and CEO of the Indian media watchdog “Newslaundr­y.” “The government sees this and has since amended and introduced several rules and to have more control and tighter regulation of the digital space,” he told DW. “The blocking of Youtube channels and social media accounts is only the next step in this ongoing trend. The crackdown has been way too transparen­t and unselfcons­cious for any self-respecting democracy,” he added.

‘FAKE NEWS’ WATCHDOG PUT ON HOLD:

And yet, there are some positive signals for those who warn that the government is trying to tighten its grip on the media. In March, India’s Supreme Court put on hold an official initiative to identify fake news related to the government. The official Fact Check Unit (FCU) had been formed to respond to any posts that it deemed fake or containing misleading facts about the business of the government. Part of the response would be to flag those posts to social media intermedia­ries.

The initiative was challenged in court by the stand-up comedian Kunal Kamra, who argued that the FCU would coerce social media companies to implement censorship of online content pertaining to the government. “The establishm­ent of the FCU would muzzle speech against the government. The new IT rules will have a chilling effect on free speech. Elections are coming, the public must have all informatio­n about the government, not informatio­n filtered out as ‘fake’ by the government,” Kamra told DW.

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