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India’s government accused of targeting foreign reporters who have ‘crossed the line’

  • A Sri Lankan Australian reporter says her work visa was not extended after she reported on the killing of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar
  • Media advocates have urged New Delhi to ‘cease using visa regulations as a tool of repression’ against reporters

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An official in front of TV screens inside a media monitoring room in Bengaluru, Karnataka, ahead of India’s general election. Photo: Reuters

Avani Dias, South Asia correspondent for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), was busy with work when she received a call last month from the Indian Ministry of External Affairs telling her that her routine visa extension would be denied.

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The Australian was told on March 27 that her most recent online news episode had “crossed a line”.

She had received the call a day after the Indian government blocked her YouTube news clips in the country. Dias had covered the killing of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada last year, a case in which Ottawa accused New Delhi agents of involvement in the murder.

Dias’ experience, and that of French journalist Vanessa Dougnac recently, has raised concerns that India was targeting the media for certain reports that crossed the authorities.

At least 30 foreign journalists wrote an open letter on Tuesday protesting against what they saw as increased restrictions on visas and journalism permits, insisting that Dias’ case was a “cause for concern” and calling on Delhi to “facilitate the vital work of a free press in line with India’s democratic traditions”.

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