India accused of shaping online media to become ‘compliant’ as it bans BBC’s Modi documentary
- Activists say the ban on the film, about Modi’s alleged role in the deadly 2002 Gujarat riots, is part of a worrying trend of increased censorship of online content in India
- But New Delhi’s move may have backfired, with the hype prompting curious people to find copies of the documentary online
But the online hype piqued his interest, and within an hour, the Bangalore city resident was able to find part one of the documentary and quickly downloaded it onto his computer.
“I invited some friends and family members to my [house], and we watched it,” Rahul said, using an alias. “The more the government tries to stop people from watching it, the more curious we become.”
India’s Foreign Ministry condemned the documentary, calling it a “propaganda piece designed to push a particular discredited narrative” that lacks objectivity and propagates “a continuing colonial mindset”.
Kanchan Gupta, a senior adviser in the government’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, denounced the film as “anti-India garbage”, while a junior minister from Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) declared that watching the film is akin to an act of “treason”.
Yet state attempts to subdue viewership appear to have backfired, with clandestine screenings of a film some analysts say reveals few new details.
“How many people in India would have actually paid attention to the documentary if not for the nature of the government’s response and the huge controversy that followed,” said Prateek Waghre, policy director at India’s Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF).
“There are certainly elements of the Streisand effect here,” he added, referring to an online phenomenon named for the singer’s attempt to suppress an image of her Malibu home only to increase attention to it.
In New Delhi’s prestigious Jawaharlal Nehru University, officials cut off power and the internet before a screening organised by a student union, saying the film would disrupt the peace on campus.
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But students still gathered to watch the film on mobile phones and laptop screens in dimly-lit rooms.
The students have since been released, according to the president of the student group, Sanam Husain. But what disciplinary action the university might take against the students remains uncertain.
“As a student, practising our fundamental rights like freedom of speech, debating controversial topics, asking questions about existing theories – these are all important parts of academic learning,” Husain said.
“It is very unfortunate that universities are trying to restrict students from the ability to have this discourse about the government because it might be too critical,” she added.
The documentary
The BBC documentary focused on Modi’s tenure as chief minister of Gujarat where violence erupted in 2002 after a suspected Muslim mob set fire to a train carrying Hindu pilgrims, killing 59 people.
The incident set off one of the worst outbreaks of religious bloodshed in post-independence India in which at least 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were killed in reprisal attacks across Gujarat.
The BBC’s investigation cites a British diplomatic investigation that concludes the riots were planned by Hindu nationalist groups, and that Modi was “directly responsible” for the “climate of impunity” that brought forth the violence.
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Critics have long-accused Modi of failing to protect Muslims and stop the riots, but the leader has denied the allegations, and in 2013, India’s top court ruled there was insufficient evidence to prosecute him.
The BBC has said the documentary was “rigorously researched” and involved a wide range of voices and opinions, including responses from people in the BJP.
This incident shows a government completely unprepared “to accept media scrutiny, academic scrutiny, and criticism,” said Megha Kumar, deputy director of analysis at consulting firm Oxford Analytica. “This is particularly striking given that India is ostensibly the world’s largest democracy.”
Stifling dissent
The latest amendment to India’s IT rules passed in 2021 would force social media platforms and online intermediaries to take down any information deemed “fake or false” by the Press Information Bureau (PIB).
And with little transparency on what information is determined false, observers also worry who it will be used against.
“There are certainly concerns that this is going to be used selectively against stories or people that don’t necessarily paint the government in a positive light,” said IFF’s Waghre.
And the space for criticism may be about to get a lot smaller, experts say, with a Digital India Bill due to replace its more than 20-year-old Information Technology Act, 2000.
“The government wants a compliant media, not an adversarial media,” Kumar added.