14 February,2023 06:06 PM IST | New Delhi | Agencies
File Photo/PTI
PDP president Mehbooba Mufti on Tuesday said the Income Tax department's survey operation at the BBC's offices in Mumbai and Delhi was "brazen hounding of the critics" of the BJP-led government at the Centre.
"Cause & effect of raids on the BBC Office is quite obvious. GOI is brazenly hounding those who speak the truth. Be it opposition leaders, media, activists or anyone else for that matter. The gloves are off & there is a price one pays for fighting for truth," Mufti tweeted.
The Income Tax Department action, part of an investigation into alleged tax evasion, comes weeks after the British Broadcasting Corporation aired a two-part documentary -- "India: The Modi Question".
Meanwhile, the Editors Guild of India said it was "deeply concerned" about the Income Tax surveys at the offices of BBC India and termed it as a continuation of a "trend" of using government agencies to "intimidate and harass" media outlets critical of the ruling establishment.
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Also read: Fully cooperating, says BBC on Income Tax 'survey' at offices in India
In a statement, the Guild also demanded that great care and sensitivity be shown in all such investigations so as to not undermine the rights of journalists and media organisations.
The statement came after Income Tax authorities conducted a survey operation at the BBC's offices in Delhi and Mumbai as part of an investigation into alleged tax evasion.
The action, it is learnt, is being carried out to investigate some international taxation and transfer pricing issues.
The broadcaster said it was "fully cooperating" with the tax authorities.
"The survey by the I-T department is in continuation of a trend of using government agencies to intimidate and harass press organisations that are critical of government policies or the ruling establishment," the Guild said in a statement here.
The Guild noted that the IT survey came soon after the release of two documentaries by the BBC on the 2002 violence in Gujarat and the current status of the minorities in India.
The documentaries stirred political waters, with the government criticising the BBC for wrong and prejudiced reportage on the Gujarat violence and attempting to ban online access and viewing of the films in India, it said.
It recalled that IT surveys were conducted in 2021 at the offices of NewsClick, Newslaundry, Dainik Bhaskar and Bharat Samachar.
"In each case, the raids and surveys were against the backdrop of critical coverage of the government establishment by the news organisations," the Guild said.
"This is a trend that undermines constitutional democracy," it said.
The Guild reiterated its earlier demand that governments ensure that such investigations are conducted within the prescribed rules and that they don't degenerate into instruments of harassment to intimidate independent media.
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