Zürcher Nachrichten - BBC tax raids put India press freedom in spotlight

EUR -
AED 3.877617
AFN 71.807807
ALL 97.772617
AMD 410.869543
ANG 1.895795
AOA 964.384836
ARS 1057.55224
AUD 1.623661
AWG 1.894435
AZN 1.78834
BAM 1.947856
BBD 2.123957
BDT 125.707294
BGN 1.956859
BHD 0.39796
BIF 3106.857885
BMD 1.055704
BND 1.409166
BOB 7.295246
BRL 6.100939
BSD 1.051925
BTN 88.833685
BWP 14.311832
BYN 3.442492
BYR 20691.802984
BZD 2.120372
CAD 1.477094
CDF 3029.870901
CHF 0.934506
CLF 0.037175
CLP 1025.775052
CNY 7.650481
CNH 7.653977
COP 4637.06472
CRC 534.724154
CUC 1.055704
CUP 27.976162
CVE 109.817103
CZK 25.300695
DJF 187.317785
DKK 7.45859
DOP 63.352214
DZD 140.860582
EGP 52.523718
ERN 15.835564
ETB 129.4699
FJD 2.397768
FKP 0.833285
GBP 0.83341
GEL 2.897931
GGP 0.833285
GHS 16.756657
GIP 0.833285
GMD 74.423577
GNF 9066.109095
GTQ 8.120878
GYD 219.972825
HKD 8.2172
HNL 26.579099
HRK 7.530612
HTG 138.1877
HUF 410.087781
IDR 16788.864432
ILS 3.94277
IMP 0.833285
INR 89.071352
IQD 1377.97981
IRR 44450.426221
ISK 145.296679
JEP 0.833285
JMD 166.842681
JOD 0.748808
JPY 164.518836
KES 136.69227
KGS 91.319811
KHR 4272.614305
KMF 490.66493
KPW 950.13341
KRW 1475.338096
KWD 0.324703
KYD 0.876625
KZT 521.981062
LAK 23064.149669
LBP 94199.393249
LKR 306.054633
LRD 191.45187
LSL 19.016418
LTL 3.11722
LVL 0.638584
LYD 5.131121
MAD 10.510034
MDL 19.118206
MGA 4917.01546
MKD 61.545741
MMK 3428.886171
MNT 3587.28293
MOP 8.433205
MRU 41.865645
MUR 48.857678
MVR 16.310698
MWK 1824.08625
MXN 21.346443
MYR 4.720585
MZN 67.522783
NAD 19.01893
NGN 1768.103947
NIO 38.712475
NOK 11.659599
NPR 142.135636
NZD 1.795711
OMR 0.406451
PAB 1.05191
PEN 3.992018
PGK 4.232776
PHP 62.226904
PKR 292.329865
PLN 4.334394
PYG 8192.663234
QAR 3.836353
RON 4.97638
RSD 116.9868
RUB 105.955952
RWF 1446.926019
SAR 3.963348
SBD 8.835737
SCR 14.11749
SDG 635.001454
SEK 11.611532
SGD 1.417573
SHP 0.833285
SLE 23.857186
SLL 22137.594933
SOS 601.159516
SRD 37.518143
STD 21850.946183
SVC 9.204459
SYP 2652.488409
SZL 19.013721
THB 36.624451
TJS 11.181794
TMT 3.705522
TND 3.314482
TOP 2.472567
TRY 36.389597
TTD 7.142867
TWD 34.361069
TZS 2800.256971
UAH 43.428889
UGX 3873.202862
USD 1.055704
UYU 45.155829
UZS 13490.976078
VES 48.5521
VND 26841.280147
VUV 125.335328
WST 2.947094
XAF 653.301744
XAG 0.034141
XAU 0.000401
XCD 2.853094
XDR 0.800148
XOF 653.301744
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.821137
ZAR 19.125085
ZMK 9502.594831
ZMW 29.059753
ZWL 339.936333
  • CMSC

    0.0300

    24.595

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    0.0600

    63.86

    +0.09%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    13.09

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.5200

    63.06

    -0.82%

  • GSK

    -0.0950

    33.365

    -0.28%

  • CMSD

    0.0264

    24.37

    +0.11%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    6.64

    -0.75%

  • BTI

    -0.0050

    36.925

    -0.01%

  • RIO

    0.2000

    62.63

    +0.32%

  • BCC

    0.3600

    138.54

    +0.26%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.23

    -0.23%

  • BCE

    -0.1850

    27.125

    -0.68%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5400

    59.65

    -0.91%

  • VOD

    0.0350

    8.955

    +0.39%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    44.97

    -0.71%

  • BP

    -0.0760

    29.014

    -0.26%

BBC tax raids put India press freedom in spotlight
BBC tax raids put India press freedom in spotlight / Photo: Sajjad HUSSAIN - AFP/File

BBC tax raids put India press freedom in spotlight

Just weeks after the BBC aired a documentary examining Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's role in deadly 2002 sectarian riots, tax inspectors descended on the broadcaster's offices.

Text size:

Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party says the two are not connected, but rights groups say the BBC raids this week show the parlous state of press freedom in the world's biggest democracy.

News outlets that publish unfavourable reporting find themselves targeted with legal action, while journalists critical of the government are harassed and even imprisoned.

The three-day lockdown of the BBC's offices in New Delhi and Mumbai is the latest of several similar "search and survey" operations against media houses.

"Unfortunately, this is becoming a trend, there is no shying away from that," Kunal Majumdar of the Committee to Protect Journalists told AFP.

At least four Indian outlets that had critically reported on the government were raided by tax officers or financial crimes investigators in the past two years, he said.

As with the BBC, those outlets said officials confiscated phones and accessed computers used by journalists.

"When you have authorities trying to go through your material, go through your work, that's intimidation," Majumdar added.

"The international community ought to wake up and start taking this matter seriously."

India has fallen 10 spots to 150th on the World Press Freedom Index, compiled by Reporters Without Borders, since Modi took office in 2014.

Journalists have long faced harassment, legal threats and intimidation for their work in India but more criminal cases are being lodged against reporters than ever, according to the Free Speech Collective.

Criminal complaints were issued against a record 67 journalists in 2020, the latest year for which figures are available, the local civil society group reported.

Ten journalists were behind bars in India at the start of the year, according to Reporters Without Borders.

Once arrested, reporters can spend months or even years waiting for the cases against them to proceed through the courts.

- 'Why be afraid?' -

The BBC documentary explored Modi's time as chief minister of Gujarat state during religious riots that killed at least 1,000 people, most of them minority Muslims.

The programme cited a British foreign ministry report claiming that Modi met senior police officers and "ordered them not to intervene" in anti-Muslim violence by right-wing Hindu groups.

The two-part series featured a BBC interview with Modi shortly after the riots, in which he was asked whether he could have handled the matter differently.

Modi responded that his main weakness was not knowing "how to handle the media".

"That's been something he has been taking care of since," Hartosh Singh Bal, the political editor of India's Caravan magazine, told AFP.

"That sums up his attitude."

The BBC documentary did not air in India but provoked a furious response from the government, which dismissed its contents as "hostile propaganda".

Authorities used information technology laws to ban the sharing of links to the programme in an effort to stop its spread on social media.

Gaurav Bhatia, a BJP spokesman, said this week's raids on the BBC offices were lawful and the timing had nothing to do with the documentary's broadcast.

"If you have been following the law of the country, if you have nothing to hide, why be afraid of an action that is according to the law," he told reporters.

- 'Misogynistic and sectarian attacks' -

Unfavourable reporting in India can prompt not only legal threats from the government, but a frightening backlash from members of the public.

"Indian journalists who are too critical of the government are subjected to all-out harassment and attack campaigns by Modi devotees," Reporters Without Borders said last year.

Washington Post columnist Rana Ayyub has been a persistent target of Modi supporters since conducting an undercover investigation that alleged government officials were implicated in the 2002 Gujarat riots.

She has been subjected to an online disinformation barrage, including doctored tweets suggesting she had defended child rapists and a report falsely announcing her arrest for money laundering.

UN-appointed experts singled out her case last year and said she had endured "relentless misogynistic and sectarian attacks".

They also said Ayyub had been targeted by Indian authorities with various forms of harassment, including the freezing of her bank accounts over tax fraud and money laundering allegations.

"I am witnessing a depravity daily that I had not witnessed before," Ayyub told AFP.

Burnt copies of a book she authored had been sent to her home in Mumbai and someone threatened to gang-rape her in front of her family, she said.

"They are emboldened," she added, "knowing that nobody will take action against them."

F.E.Ackermann--NZN