India: SFLC.in asks Haryana government to reconsider internet shutdown
The Haryana government in India ordered the suspension of internet services in the five districts of the state, in response to ongoing farmers’ protests.
Anatomy of the Pegasus spyware in India
SFLC.in chronicles the recent history of surveillance operations in India and its link to the Pegasus spyware issue. It asks the Indian government to clarify the relationship between security agencies and the Israeli NSO group.
How is free speech being curtailed during the pandemic by the Indian government?
SFLC.in identifies cases and trends of how censorship was carried out in India during the pandemic.
EFF: India’s strict rules for online intermediaries undermine freedom of expression
The Electronic Frontier Foundation said India’s 2021 Rules restrict companies’ discretion in moderating their own platforms and create new possibilities for government surveillance of citizens.
India: Government and tech firms should uphold privacy, free speech
Several civil society groups have expressed concern over the actions of the Indian government that violate free expression and privacy rights as authorities intensify the suppression of criticism related to the ongoing farmers’ protests.
India: RSF denounces “systemic repression” of Manipur’s media
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) looks closer into the rising cases of press freedom violations in Manipur state, located in northeast India.
India: RSF deplores arbitrary raids on Delhi news website “Newsclick”
Authorities raided the office of Delhi-based news website “Newsclick” on allegations of money laundering. Searches were also done in the homes of staff members. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said the raids were meant to harass an independent media which has consistently covered the ongoing farmers’ protests in India.
Indian police arrest, investigate journalists covering farmers’ protests
Several journalists are being harassed and investigated by authorities for their coverage of the ongoing farmers’ protest across India. Some journalists’ Twitter accounts were also briefly suspended.
COVID-19 pandemic severely undermined press freedom in South Asia
According to IPI’s COVID-19 Press Freedom Tracker, nearly 200 violations linked to the pandemic were reported from the Asia-Pacific region, of which 107 were from four South Asian countries: Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Nepal.
Journalists in India face attacks, legal action, and threats
Dozens of local journalists were included in lists allegedly identifying them as “anti-Hindu” or as “Indian agents”. Because of this, several reporters in the list faced police investigations and attacks while performing their duties.
Indian Supreme Court petitioned to initiate contempt proceedings against cartoonist
The Committee to Protect Journalists said the contempt proceedings against political cartoonist Rachita Taneja, if allowed by the Supreme Court, will send a chilling message to the media. A petition was filed against Taneja for her comics about the judiciary.
IFJ calls on Indian government to end impunity for crimes against journalists
The International Federation of Journalists has sent a letter to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi calling on the government to take swift action to improve the state of impunity in India. According to IFJ monitoring, 55 journalists have been killed since 2010 in India.
India conducts counterterrorism raids targeting peaceful critics
Indian authorities carried out several raids on the offices of nongovernmental organizations, the homes of several activists, and a newspaper office in Jammu and Kashmir, Delhi, and Bangalore. Human Rights Watch said the raids are part of a crackdown by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party on civil society groups.
India: Officials seal office of “Kashmir Times” in Srinagar
The eviction of journalists and the sealing of the entrance of one of the oldest English-language publications in the Kashmir Valley, the “Kashmir Times”, is seen as government reprisal against the paper’s editor who has spoken out in defense of press freedom.
India: Karnataka government forcibly shuts down Power TV
The government in Karnataka, India has ordered the shutdown of Power TV after it aired reports on corruption allegations against the chief minister and his family. The order could affect the jobs of 250 employees.
Kashmir cyber-police threaten, slap reporter who questioned their methods
Kashmiri journalist Auqib Javeed said he was “questioned for five hours at the police station and slapped, threatened and humiliated” in the capital Srinagar. This happened after he wrote a story for Article 14 about the methods used by the cyber-police to question social media users.