India

At a glance At a glance
India

545 articles
REUTERS/Krishnendu Halder

Using arts to help rural India speak out

Activist Shubhranshu Choudhary spoke to Index about his most recent project, teaching rural villagers through performing arts how their mobile phones can be used to report incidents and issues that may otherwise be given the cold-shoulder by the authorities.

Link to: The repugnant Section 66A of India’s Information Technology Act

The repugnant Section 66A of India’s Information Technology Act

Section 66A of India’s Information Technology Act is a blatantly arbitrary law and repealing it is the only way to protect and uphold freedom of expression, Index argues.

Link to: Arrests made in murder of Indian journalist in Odisha state

Arrests made in murder of Indian journalist in Odisha state

Shortly before his murder, Indian journalist Tarun Kumar Acharya had published a report exposing child labour practices at a local cashew processing factory.

Link to: Q&A: Indian journalist Sudhir Dhawale discusses his release from prison

Q&A: Indian journalist Sudhir Dhawale discusses his release from prison

After languishing in jail for 40 months, Mumbai-based journalist and activist Sudhir Dhawale has walked free. He spoke with CPJ about his lengthy imprisonment and the state of press freedom in India.

Link to: Indian man facing criminal investigation over anti-Modi Facebook comments

Indian man facing criminal investigation over anti-Modi Facebook comments

An Indian man has found himself in trouble for allegedly posting a Facebook comments against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The incident raises serious doubts over online freedom in the world’s biggest democracy.

Screenshot from a BBC documentary entitled: Vagina Monologues challenges India's taboos

India’s Supreme Court breaks police stranglehold on theatre

Theatre’s subversive and liberating potential is renowned, and governments the world over have never held themselves back from wielding the censor’s bludgeon, but in India, it is the police which has been vested with remarkably sweeping powers to crack down on theatrical performances.

Link to: Indian journalists beaten outside political leader’s home

Indian journalists beaten outside political leader’s home

According to news reports, at least four journalists were beaten by members of a Tamil Nadu regional party and supporters and their equipment was damaged.

Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi, who will be the next prime minister of India, shows the media a letter he received from India's President Pranab Mukherjee after meeting him at the Presidential Palace in New Delhi, 20 May 2014, REUTERS/Adnan Abidi

India’s democracy challenge, and Modi’s

In the wake of Narendra Modi’s overwhelming victory in India’s recent elections, commentators have noted the many, daunting challenges facing the new prime minister of the world’s most populous democracy.

Link to: Indian reporters in Pakistan facing expulsion

Indian reporters in Pakistan facing expulsion

Pakistani authorities recently informed Meena Menon, a correspondent for “The Hindu”, and Snehesh Alex Philip, a correspondent for the Press Trust of India, that their visas would not be renewed and that they would need to leave the country in one week.

Link to: Attack on home of critical Indian journalist

Attack on home of critical Indian journalist

Unidentified assailants threw a Molotov cocktail at the home of journalist Devinder Pal. He recently wrote a series of investigative reports about the business interests of extended family members of a high-level government official.

Supporters of Kashmir's ruling National Conference (NC) party attend an election campaign ahead of the fifth phase of India's general election in Pulwama, 15 April 2014, REUTERS/Danish Ismail

Journalists attacked in northern India while covering elections

RWB condemns attacks on journalists in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir during coverage of parliamentary elections that are taking in stages from 7 April to 12 May 2014.

Anil Ambani, chairman of the Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group, poses for photographers before addressing the annual shareholders meeting in Mumbai, 27 August 2013, REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

Expose crony capitalism and be censored in India

A fire-and-brimstone attorney’s notice from a hydrocarbon production company arrived the day after the book “Gas Wars – Crony Capitalism and the Ambanis” was launched. The book contends that high ranking government officials, including ministers, aided and abetted the pillage of public resources.

Link to: Interview: Harassment, assaults raise alarm bells about treatment of female journalists in India

Interview: Harassment, assaults raise alarm bells about treatment of female journalists in India

The recent attack and gang-rape of an Indian journalist who was on assignment in the northern state of Uttar Pardesh underscores the dangers faced by female reporters, a newspaper editor told IPI in an interview.

Link to: India’s elections: Hate speech and the “greatest show on Earth”

India’s elections: Hate speech and the “greatest show on Earth”

As the Indian elections are underway, political parties seem to be indulging in the same hate speech, communal politicking and calculations that work to polarise the electorate and garner votes.

Link to: Hindu supremacists stall play in India

Hindu supremacists stall play in India

A Hindu supremacist group has succeeded in getting “Ali J”, a play centred around the partition of India and communal riots, and seeking to demolish every argument advanced by Hindu fundamentalists, off the stage. This is only the latest incident aimed at censorship and “rewriting history”.

Actor and politician Gul Panag, a candidate of the Common Man Party, waves towards supporters during a roadshow ahead of the general election in the northern Indian city of Chandigarh, 30 March 2014, REUTERS/Ajay Verm

Twitter trolls in India: Sexist abuse as a tool to muzzle women

Of late, a series of incidents in India have sounded a note of caution against the euphoria around social media. It has been compared to a street where women are abused, threatened, ogled at, rebuked, only virtually.