Sharp Downslide: India Slips 11 Ranks in Press Freedom Index, Now 161 of 180 Countries
As the 19th worst performer, India finds itself among the 31 countries where RSF calls the situation for journalists is "very serious".
New Delhi:
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released the 21st edition of its World Press Freedom Index on Wednesday (May 3), and it came with bad news for India. India has slipped to the 161st rank in terms of press freedom out of 180 countries ranked – a while 11 ranks worse than 2022, when it stood at 150.
In its opening remarks about why India has been classified this way, RSF states, “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”, ruled since 2014 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the embodiment of the Hindu nationalist right.”
The RSF highlights several serious problems with the media landscape in India, one of which is the concentration of ownership:
“…the abundance of media outlets conceals tendencies toward the concentration of ownership, with only a handful of sprawling media companies at the national level, including the Times Group, HT Media Ltd, The Hindu Group and Network18. Four dailies share three quarters of the readership in Hindi, the country’s leading language. The concentration is even more marked at the regional level for local language publications such as Kolkata’s Bengali-language Anandabazar Patrika, the Mumbai-based daily Lokmat, published in Marathi, and Malayala Manorama, distributed in southern India. This concentration of ownership in the print media can also be observed in the TV sector with major TV networks such as NDTV. The state-owned All India Radio (AIR) network owns all news radio stations.”
Legally too, there are several ways journalists are harassed by those in power – including through charges of sedition and criminal defamation, according to RSF. “Indian law is protective in theory but charges of defamation, sedition, contempt of court and endangering national security are increasingly used against journalists critical of the government, who are branded as “anti-national”,” the report notes.
There is a lack of diversity in Indian newsrooms, according to RSF. “For the most part, only Hindu men from upper castes hold senior positions in journalism or are media executives – a bias that is reflected in media content. For example, fewer than 15% of the participants in major evening talk shows are women.”
Even in terms of safety of journalists, India is performing poorly RSF notes: “With an average of three or four journalists killed in connection with their work every year, India is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for the media.” The report specifically talks about the targeted harassment of women journalists online and the ongoing police interference in how the press is treated in Kashmir.
Even within South Asia, India is among the worst performs in the index. While Bangladesh comes off slightly worse, at the 163rd rank, Pakistan is several ranks ahead of India at 150th. Even Afghanistan, where the Taliban government is known to be no friend to independent journalists, has done better, with a rank of 152. Bhutan is at 90 and Sri Lanka at 135.
https://thewire.in/media/rsf-press-freedom-index-india

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