Random Image Display on Page Reload

Indian Police Use Terrorism Law to Raid Newsclick Journalists

Oct 3, 2023 7:23 AM

India Is Using Terrorism Laws to Target Journalists

Police seized laptops and phones from reporters working for the anti-establishment Newsclick website—the latest outlet to be raided during a crackdown on media in India.

Indian Police Use Terrorism Law to Raid Newsclick Journalists

GETTY

A special unit of the Delhi Police, reporting directly to Narendra Modi’s union government, this morning seized the laptops and phones of journalists and satirists associated with a news website, Newsclick.in. The site has been charged under a law usually used to deal with terrorism suspects, and two journalists have been detained.

Journalists Abhisar Sharma, Aritry Das, and Bhasha Singh posted about the raids on X, the site formerly known as Twitter, confirming that Delhi Police had seized their laptops and phones.

The raids are the latest in a string of actions against journalists in India under the Modi government, which has increasingly tried to control the national narrative offline and online by clamping down on independent media, while allowing pro-government media to allegedly spread disinformation and hate against minorities with impunity.

“This is a completely McCarthyist tactic and approach, building a hysteria in sections of the media, and then proceeding with a ruthless silencing of dissent and dissidents,” Veteran journalist P Sainath says. “It will only intensify as the general elections in India get close.”

Newsclick has been under investigation since August, when a New York Times article alleged that it had spread Chinese propaganda and was being funded by American tech mogul Neville Roy Singham. The left-leaning news site, known for publishing anti-establishment stories, denied the allegations.

The Enforcement Directorate, which investigates money laundering, froze Newsclick’s assets in August. The directorate previously raided Newsclick’s premises and the homes of some of its senior staff in 2021.

Most Popular

This is not the first time the law enforcement agencies have targeted anti-establishment journalists and news publications. In February this year, income tax officials raided the BBC’s offices in India, weeks after it had released a documentary critical of Modi and the rise of Hindu nationalism. In July 2021, tax authorities opened an investigation into Dainik Bhaskar, one of the largest newspapers in India, which had exposed the state’s handling of Covid-19. Independent websites, including The Quint, have also been subjected to similar raids, where devices of journalists were seized. In October last year, the Delhi Police seized the electronic devices of five journalists working with The Wire after a complaint by Amit Malviya, the head of the IT Cell of Modi’s party.

Since Modi came to power in 2014, the Indian government has charged several journalists under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, which was previously only invoked while dealing with terrorist organizations. The government has been accused of abusing the law in the past and of planting evidence on electronic devices. Sixteen activists, scholars and journalists were arrested in connection with a riot in Pune, Maharashtra in 2018 under the same UAPA laws. However, forensic analysis later revealed that the evidence against them was planted on the devices of at least two of the arrested. The case continues to drag on. Several of the activists languish in jail; some have recently received bail. One died in prison, awaiting justice.

The Internet Freedom Foundation, an NGO, said in a statement on X that it is concerned with the seizure of digital devices, which “violate right to privacy and negatively impact press freedom in derogation of due process of law.”

The Press Club of India expressed its solidarity with Newsclick. “The Press Club of India is deeply concerned about the multiple raids conducted on the houses of journalists and writers associated with NewsClick. We are monitoring the developments and will be releasing a detailed statement,” it said.

Saba Naqvi, a Delhi-based journalist, says the raids seem intended to send a chilling message to the rest of the independent media. “How can you target individual journalists while investigating the business model of a website?” she says. “The journalists in question have done important ground reporting and analytical commentary regarding India. They are people who care about Indian democracy. The developments are deeply disturbing.”

Get More From WIRED

Parth M.N. is an independent journalist based in Mumbai.
Freelance Writer

More from WIRED

X Fires Its Election Team Before a Huge Election Year

The “last man standing” in X’s threat intelligence team has been fired, as the company guts its election integrity response ahead of a year in which more than 50 countries go to the polls.

Vittoria Elliott

The Dark Economics of Russell Brand

Russell Brand has built a massive following on YouTube and Rumble with conspiracy-laden videos. He says the mainstream is out to get him—but is it all just a grift?

Peter Guest

The Trial of Sam Bankman-Fried, Explained

White-collar defendants use three main defenses: “It wasn’t me, I didn’t mean it, and the people that say I did are lying.” FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried is likely to go for “I didn’t mean it,” experts say.

Joel Khalili

White Supremacist Active Clubs Are Breeding on Telegram

A “friendlier” front for racist extremism has spread rapidly across the US in recent months, as active club channels network on Telegram's encrypted messaging app.

David Gilbert

TikTok Is Spending $1.3 Billion to Dodge Bans in Europe

European politicians are nervous about where TikTok’s data goes. The company is spending big on local data centers, but analysts say it’s not enough.

Chris Stokel-Walker

The Global Victims of FTX’s Collapse Won’t Get their Day in Court

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried is about to stand trial in the US. But many customers who lost big when the exchange collapsed are unlikely to get their money back.

Parth M.N.

Inside FTX’s All-Night Race to Stop a $1 Billion Crypto Heist

The same chaotic day FTX declared bankruptcy, someone began stealing hundreds of millions of dollars from its coffers. A WIRED investigation reveals the company’s “very crazy night” trying to stop them.

Andy Greenberg

The 15-Minute City Conspiracy Theory Goes Mainstream

The fringe idea that cities built for biking and walking are part of a government plot has been picked up by … the UK government.

David Gilbert

*****
Credit belongs to : www.wired.com

Check Also

How to Stop ChatGPT’s Voice Feature From Interrupting You

Reece Rogers Gear Apr 19, 2024 11:23 AM How to Stop ChatGPT’s Voice Feature From …