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Editors Guild of India prod to Rahul Gandhi on media laws over press freedom concerns

In its letter to Rahul, the guild listed the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, Press and Registration of Periodicals Act, Broadcasting Services Regulation Bill and amendments to the Information Technology rules and explained why it opposed them. All of them were notified or introduced last year

Rahul Gandhi. File picture

Pheroze L. Vincent
Published 21.07.24, 06:07 AM

The Editors Guild of India has urged Rahul Gandhi, the leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, to take up in Parliament its concerns over the “legislative measures” taken over the last few years “to control (the) media”.

In its letter to Rahul, the guild listed the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, Press and Registration of Periodicals Act, Broadcasting Services Regulation Bill and amendments to the Information Technology rules and explained why it opposed them. All of them were notified or introduced last year.

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“Even though some of them have been enacted in the Parliament, we are highlighting these concerns with an urgent request for driving renewed parliamentary debate and stakeholder consultation on these critical issues affecting press freedom, as well as to safeguard press freedom in any new legislative measure that will have a potential to control media,” the Guild wrote.

“We believe that a free and independent press is vital for the health of our democracy, and it is imperative that these legislative measures are revisited to safeguard these fundamental principles,” the Guild added.

The guild listed its detailed objections to each legislation.

Digital Personal Data Protection Act

Press and Registration of Periodicals Act

Broadcasting Services Regulation Bill

On the IT Rules amendments, the guild said they gave the “government the power to constitute a ‘fact-checking unit’ with sweeping authority to determine what is ‘fake or false or misleading’ regarding any business of the central government and instruct intermediaries not to host such content. This absolute power lacked a governing mechanism for oversight, judicial review, or adherence to Supreme Court guidelines on content blocking, effectively leading to censorship”.

The guild said it had challenged this amendment in Bombay High Court, and the fact-checking unit had been stayed by the Supreme Court.

Rahul Gandhi Editors Guild Of India (EGI) Press Freedom Digital Personal Data Protection Act Press And Registration Of Periodicals Act Broadcasting Services Regulation Bill IT Rules
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