New Delhi: Two weeks after the Press Information Bureau of India (PIB) released the Central Media Accreditation Guidelines-2022, the Editors Guild of India (EGI) has flagged concern and demanded a withdrawal while urging the PIB to undertake “meaningful consultation” with all the stakeholders if it is intent on revising them.
The newly released guidelines, issued on 8 February, lay down the rules for giving accreditation to journalists for accessing and reporting from the headquarters of the Government of India.
In a statement issued Sunday, EGI described the provisions listed in the guidelines as “arbitrary” and “without any due process of law”. “Accreditation can be revoked if a journalist is charged with a serious cognizable offence or if a journalist acts in a manner which is prejudicial to the sovereignty and integrity of India…,” the statement quotes portions from the guidelines.
According to EGI, these guidelines have been introduced without any prior consultation with journalists’ bodies or media organisations.
Read the EGI’s full statement here:
The Editors Guild of India is deeply concerned about the newly released Central Media Accreditation Guidelines issued by the Press Information Bureau of India, which lays down the rules for giving accreditation to journalists for accessing and reporting from the headquarters of the Government of India.
The guidelines contain various new provisions under which accreditation of a journalist can be revoked, many of which are arbitrary and without any due process of law. For instance, accreditation can be revoked if a journalist is “charged with a serious cognizable offence”, or if a journalist, “acts in a manner which is prejudicial to the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of State, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, decency or morality or in relation to contempt of court, defamation or incitement to an offence”.
It is bizarre that merely being charged has been mentioned as a ground for cancellation. The other grounds for cancellation are manifestly vague and subjective, especially since no procedures have been set out and there is no mention of the adjudicating authority that will decide on suspension. Worse still, concerned journalists have not been given an opportunity to be heard. Most surprisingly, ‘defamation’ has been included as a ground for cancellation.
A new clause requiring police verification has been added without defining the contours of such verification. Since no standards have been prescribed, it can grant unfettered powers to the police for denying accreditation to journalists who may be seen as critical of the government.
It is clear that these vague, arbitrary, and draconian clauses have been included with an intent to restrict any critical and investigative reporting of government affairs. There are other provisions as well that are restrictive. In the case of freelance journalists, the requirements pertaining to the number of bylines have been made unreasonably high. The Guild has written a detailed letter to the PIB elaborating on all these issues.
Furthermore, these guidelines have been introduced without any prior consultation with journalists’ bodies, media organisations, or any other relevant stakeholders.
The Guild, therefore, demands a withdrawal of these guidelines and urges the PIB to undertake meaningful consultation with all the stakeholders if it is intent on revising them.
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Source: The Print