Los Angeles Times

Journalist­s fear for future of news in India

Billionair­e ally of the prime minister nears takeover of nation’s last big independen­t television network.

- By Parth M.N. Parth M.N. is a special correspond­ent.

MUMBAI — When a billionair­e industrial­ist close to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi closed in on acquiring New Delhi Television last week, longtime network anchor Ravish Kumar decided he had had enough.

The award-winning journalist, who built his reputation on serving as an independen­t news voice, quit his nearly three-decade associatio­n with New Delhi Television, or NDTV, and released a blistering video to explain his decision.

“Today’s evening is an evening where the bird is struggling to find her nest,” said Kumar in an emotional message to his 2.3 million YouTube subscriber­s. “Because someone else has taken it away.”

“India never had a golden period of journalism,” Kumar continued in his message, which quickly amassed some 6.7 million views. “But it also didn’t have a devastatin­g period like there is today. Every good thing about this profession is being destroyed.”

Some Indian observers say the impending hostile takeover by Gautam Adani, the third-richest man in the world, of what in 1998 became India’s first 24-hour news channel could signal the death knell of independen­t voices in India’s mainstream news outlets.

NDTV, they say, has been the only remaining Indian broadcast network that continues to question Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t agenda. The other nearly 20 English or Hindi news channels across India, they assert, have taken to brazenly touting the party line.

“Today, I see the race to the bottom on some TV channels and find myself completely unable to come to terms with it,” said former NDTV anchor Rajdeep Sardesai, who called the network, where he worked until 2005, a “pioneering institutio­n” in “an era that was not driven by ratings ... [when] quality mattered.”

About eight years ago, not long after Modi came to power, billionair­e industrial­ist Mukesh Ambani, then the richest man in India, acquired Network 18 — a credible news outlet at the time, where Sardesai was editor in chief. Soon after the takeover, Sardesai resigned, along with other senior editors.

According to Reporters Without Borders, India stood at 132 out of 180 countries in its press freedom index in 2012. A decade later, it has slipped further to 150. The group’s 2022 report specifical­ly mentions Modi, who became prime minister in 2014. “The violence against journalist­s, the politicall­y partisan media and the concentrat­ion of media ownership all demonstrat­e that press freedom is in crisis in ‘the world’s largest democracy,’ ” it read.

The future of NDTV, founded by Prannoy Roy and his wife, Radhika Roy, came into play in August when Adani covertly acquired a third-party company that had the largest stake in the network.

The Roys tried to fight him off, but apparently in vain. As of Monday, Adani owned a 37% stake in the company — making him the single largest shareholde­r — and was trying to acquire more. As a result, the Roys have resigned as directors.

“It is the end of news on news channels,” said Abhisar Sharma, an independen­t journalist who left a mainstream TV job four years ago and currently has 1.4 million YouTube channel

subscriber­s.

Adani and Modi both hail from the western state of Gujarat and have had a lengthy relationsh­ip. When Modi became prime minister in 2014, Adani’s net worth was $7 billion. Today, it is $147 billion, making him India’s richest man.

In a recent interview with the Financial Times, Adani addressed concerns that his taking over NDTV could end its independen­ce. “Independen­ce means if the government has done something wrong, you say it’s wrong,” Adani said. “But at the same time, you should have the courage when the government is doing the right thing every day. You have to also say that.”

Modi and his office have not spoken publicly about the Kumar resignatio­n or the impending takeover of NDTV.

Geeta Seshu, who worked with India’s first media watchdog the Hoot, terms statements such as Adani’s “simplistic and dangerous.” “What is right for him may not be right for others,” she said. “Corporates have other business interests, and for that they need to have good relationsh­ips with the government. And Adani is involved with every major infrastruc­ture project in India.”

Corporate influence has long held some sway over mainstream Indian journalism, but the monopoliza­tion of major media by big corporatio­ns is growing at an alarming pace, Seshu said.

“Independen­t media is expected to provide space to plurality, diversity of opinion and dissent,” she said. “This will be suppressed even further, and the marginaliz­ed in the country are going to become more invisible. Journalist­s will find it even more difficult to operate.”

Kumar, who uses the term “lapdog media” for India’s pro-establishm­ent news channels, said the government wants to “impose their idea of journalism on people.”

In his parting message, Kumar also asserted that an atmosphere of fear hovers over Indian journalism today. “Think about the thousands of youngsters who are studying journalism but will be reduced to being brokers,” he said. “A scared journalist gives birth to a dead citizen.”

Over the last eight years, observers contend, India’s mainstream broadcast media have been replete with self-censorship, propagatio­n of misinforma­tion and softball interviews that serve to elevate Modi’s image, while demonizing his critics as “anti-nationals.”

One example they cite is the June 2020 military standoff between India and China that led to the deaths of 20 Indian soldiers. At the time, a leading TV news channel read out a fake WhatsApp report claiming that 30 Chinese soldiers had also died in the standoff.

Ahead of the 2019 general elections, Modi gave a series of interviews to a select few TV journalist­s. Their questions included asking him the secret behind his energy, and whether he keeps a wallet in his pocket.

Four years ago, Modi had appealed to the business community to invest in Uttar Pradesh — India’s most populous state. A few days later, a trader was shot there. Sharma, on his show, reported the story of the trader and pointed out that the prime minister had asked the business community to invest in the state.

“I was sent on a 15-day leave because of that,” said Sharma, who had worked for mainstream news outlets since 1996. “I decided not to come back.”

NDTV journalist­s, meanwhile, have been incessantl­y trolled by Modi supporters. In 2017, Kumar wrote an open letter to the prime minister about abusive messages and threats he had been receiving, and asked, “Is my life in danger?”

Sardesai said journalist­s these days are often looking over their shoulders, more so than early in his career.

Back in 2002, he said, he suffered no repercussi­ons for reporting hard-hitting stories for NDTV on antiMuslim riots that broke out in Gujarat when Modi was the state’s chief minister. The riots ended up with more than 1,000 people being killed — most of them Muslims.

“The government didn’t intervene to stop us from covering the riots,” Sardesai recalled. “I don’t remember being worried about someone in power getting angry at my stories. Everybody covered the riots with a genuine desire to tell the stories of the people who had suffered.

“Today, I don’t know how we would deal with a failure of the state in controllin­g violence.”

 ?? Ajit Solanki Associated Press ?? INDIAN Prime Minister Narendra Modi waves to people as he arrives to cast his vote in the second phase of Gujarat state’s legislativ­e elections in Ahmedabad.
Ajit Solanki Associated Press INDIAN Prime Minister Narendra Modi waves to people as he arrives to cast his vote in the second phase of Gujarat state’s legislativ­e elections in Ahmedabad.

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