NDTV Decries Attack on Free Speech as CBI Searches Prannoy Roy’s Premises -Updated
NDTV Decries Attack on Free Speech as CBI Searches Prannoy Roy’s Premises
‘We have one message to those who are trying to destroy the institutions of India and everything it stands for: we will fight for our country and overcome these forces,’ the channel said.
NDTV founder and chief, Prannoy Roy. Credit: NDTV
New Delhi: In a move that the channel described as an assault on democracy and free speech, the Central Bureau of Investigation on Monday carried out searches at the residence of NDTV chief Prannoy Roy in the national capital and in Dehradun for allegedly causing losses to a private bank.
According to PTI, which quoted CBI sources, the agency has registered a case against Roy, his wife Radhika and a company they own, RRPR Holdings, “for allegedly causing a loss of Rs 48 crore to ICICI Bank”.
The CBI said it was conducting its searches in four different places in Delhi and Dehradun, including the personal home of the Roys.
In a strongly worded statement, NDTV accused the CBI of “[stepping] up the concerted harassment of NDTV and its promoters based on the same old endless false accusations.”
“NDTV and its promoters will fight tirelessly against this witch-hunt by multiple agencies,’ the channel statement said, adding:
In a subsequent statement, the channel elaborated on its charge that the CBI’s action was mala fide:
NDTV is India’s oldest private news channel – and also one of its most highly regarded. Its sober and independent editorial tone stands in stark contrast to what is now the norm in the electronic media.
In a statement on Monday evening, the Editors Guild also expressed its concern at the CBI raidL
Media freedom under attack
Earlier this year, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting was accused of pursuing a vendetta against the company by imposing a one-day ban on its Hindi channel, NDTV India, for allegedly violating official coverage rules during the army’s counter-terrorist operation in Pathankot. As journalists protested what they said was an attack on media freedom – most channels had telecast the same information but NDTV was being penalised because of its editorial independence vis a vis the government, they alleged – the ministry backed down from implementing its order. NDTV’s appeal against the ban is now being heard by the Supreme Court.
According to The Hoot, a site which tracks media developments in India, the previous year witnessed the freedom of speech and media coming under further strain.
Though the NDTV founders are in a dispute with the income tax authorities and have gone to court over that, the Hindustan Times has reported that Monday’s searches are linked to a separate probe by the CBI into a loan the Roys took from ICICI in 2008. “A case of bank fraud has been registered against RRPR and unknown bank officials. This is part of CBI’s recent crackdown on bank frauds and wilful defaulters,” the Hindustan Times quoted a CBI source as saying.
The CBI’s action comes days after the channel, considered the least-government friendly by the BJP and its supporters, had a run-in with an official spokesperson of the ruling party, Sambit Patra, last week. After accusing the channel of pursuing “an agenda” during a studio debate on the government’s policies on cattle slaughter, Patra was asked by the anchor, Nidhi Razdan, to leave her show.
During the tenure of the first NDA government, Enforcement Directorate raids against the promoters of Tehelka soon after its exposé of political corruption led to the website eventually shutting shop.
Journalists, commentators react
News of the CBI searches triggered immediate reactions from journalists and commentators.
The historian Ramachandra Guha noted the irony of the CBI going after the NDTV’s owners for causing an alleged loss of Rs 48 crore when politically influential corporates like the Adanis owed many times more:
N. Ram, published of The Hindu and former editor of the newspaper said it was essential that those who value media freedom speak out now:
NDTV’s managing editor Nidhi Razdan described the CBI raids as aimed at those in the media “fearlessly asking questions”:
Sreenivasan Jain of NDTV drew attention to the fact that most of the electronic media were not even covering the CBI action against a news organisation,
Praveen Swami, strategic affairs editor of the Indian Express, drew a parallel between the CBI’s action and the 1975-77 Emergency:
Note: The Wire competes with ndtv.com, the website of NDTV
https://thewire.in/143811/ndtv-decries-attack-free-speech-cbi-raids-prannoy-roy/





0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home