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‘Not worthy of a democracy’: Behind India’s slide on press freedom

India’s waning press freedoms struck an international chord last month, when dozens of tax officials descended on the BBC’s Mumbai and Delhi offices. The three-day raid came weeks after the government invoked emergency laws to block a BBC documentary examining Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s role in a spate of deadly anti-Muslim riots in 2002, and it illustrates the growing challenges Indian journalists face.

India does not have a spotless history of free speech, but experts say the journalism industry has never before faced such serious pressures on so many different fronts, including Mr. Modi’s populist leadership style, market consolidation, self-censorship, and weak legal protections for journalists.

Why We Wrote This

India’s press freedoms were spiraling long before authorities targeted the BBC. Trends of anti-media violence, censorship, and legal intimidation could have disastrous consequences for the world’s largest democracy.

The result is India has fallen to the 150th rank out of 180 countries on the 2022 World Press Freedom Index and is described as “one of the world’s most dangerous countries for the media” in the accompanying report. 

“Through the BBC case, the world is discovering how the government in India can censor some programs, but for an average Indian journalist, this is nothing new,” says Daniel Bastard, head of the Asia-Pacific desk at Reporters Without Borders. “The question is: Can the world’s largest democracy function properly without informed citizens?”

India’s waning press freedoms struck an international chord last month, when dozens of tax officials descended on the BBC’s Mumbai and Delhi offices and spent three days questioning staff, searching documents and emails, and cloning employees’ phones and laptops.

The raid – or “survey” as authorities called it – came weeks after the BBC released a documentary examining Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s role in a spate of deadly anti-Muslim riots in 2002, when he was chief minister of Gujarat state. The government immediately invoked emergency laws to block its distribution in India. 

The ordeal follows a broader pattern of the Modi administration using the legal system to silence critics, and illustrates the growing challenges Indian journalists face.

Why We Wrote This

India’s press freedoms were spiraling long before authorities targeted the BBC. Trends of anti-media violence, censorship, and legal intimidation could have disastrous consequences for the world’s largest democracy.

It is hard not to trace dwindling freedoms to the 2014 election of Mr. Modi and his Hindu-nationalist brand of populism, according to Daniel Bastard, head of the Asia-Pacific desk at Reporters Without Borders (RSF). Still, there are other factors at play as well, including market consolidation, self-censorship, and weak legal protections for journalists. 

The result is India has fallen to the 150th rank out of 180 countries on RSF’s 2022 World Press Freedom Index and is described as “one of the world’s most dangerous countries for the media” in the accompanying report. 

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