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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 30 April 2024

Former I&B minister Prakash Javadekar says freedom of press is under attack in Kerala

Javadekar accuses Left government of 'terrorising' media

PTI Published 05.07.23, 01:23 PM
Prakash Javadekar

Prakash Javadekar File Photo

Expressing concern over the police action against certain media houses in Kerala, former Information and Broadcasting Minister Prakash Javadeker said on Wednesday that freedom of the press was under attack in the state and accused the Left government of "terrorising the media" for exposing its alleged wrongdoings.

Referring to the cases registered against a woman reporter of a prominent Malayalam news channel in Kochi a few weeks ago and the recent police action against a Thiruvananthapuram-based online news channel and its employees, the senior BJP leader alleged that those were the "first kind of terrorism against the media" in the southern state.

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He said the actions of the Left government against the media and media personnel clearly showed its 'political vendetta' against those who expose the alleged wrongdoings of the Pinarayi Vijayan-led dispensation.

"This is clearly a political vendetta and an attack on freedom of the press. This is the Kerala government's effort to terrorise the media. This is condemnable," Javadekar told PTI.

The statement of the BJP Kerala in-charge came amid police action against a Malayalam online news channel as part of an investigation to trace its editor following a case filed against him under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act by an MLA belonging to the ruling Left.

Police said their teams carried out searches at the offices of "Marunadan Malayali" in Thiruvananthapuram and an office-cum-residence in Kochi on Monday night and seized computers and memory cards as part of their investigation to find out the whereabouts of its absconding editor, Shajan Skaria.

The police intensified the action against the online channel, days after the Kerala High Court dismissed Skaria's anticipatory bail plea in the complaint lodged by Kunnathunad MLA P V Sreenijin with the Elamakkara police.

Meanwhile, Left MLA P V Anvar, representing Nilambur constituency in the state Assembly, warned of strong legal action against those media houses indulging in alleged blackmailing, spreading fake news, and creating communal divides in society.

"Be it mainstream media, YouTube channels... whoever it is, legally everything possible will be done against them," Anvar said in a Facebook post.

"We will fight against them using all the possibilities of the law. If possible we will register FIRs against such media houses. The organising committee (a reference to a team of people involved in the action against the media) has decided to create such an eco-system (in Kerala)", he said.

Flaying the police action against the employees of the media, the Thiruvananthapuram Press Club urged the state government to back off from the move to "destroy" the fourth estate for giving news that is not favourable to them.

It alleged that about 10 employees of the online media were taken into custody, its offices were closed, and at least 32 laptops, 10 computers, seven cameras, 12 mobile phones, and other devices were seized.

The detained employees were released on Tuesday afternoon, the press club claimed.

Hitting back at the Kerala Union of Working Journalists (KUWJ) and the Thiruvananthapuram Press Club, which had deplored the government action against the media persons, Anvar said their cries would not be heard and made it clear that those who carry out responsible journalism will not face any retaliation.

When contacted, Kochi City Police Commissioner K Sethuraman told PTI that the raids at the online news channel's office and related actions were part of the investigation to trace its absconding editor and were not a "crackdown" on the activities of the establishment.

After Kunnathunadu MLA Sreenijin lodged a complaint with the police alleging that the online news channel deliberately defamed him by spreading fake news, Skaria moved the Special Court, seeking protection from arrest.

The Special Court dismissed the plea, saying that publication of the video containing derisive and derogatory comments, is sufficient to attract the alleged offences, and hence, the bar on anticipatory bail under Section 18 of the SC/ST (PoA) Act would apply.

Skaria then moved the High Court, but it upheld the Sessions Court order, making scathing observations against the online channel's style of functioning.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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