BBC offices in India have been raided by tax department officials, just weeks after the release of a documentary critical of the prime minister, Narendra Modi, which was later blocked by the government.
According to those working at the broadcaster, more than a dozen officials from the country’s income tax department turned up at the BBC offices in Delhi and Mumbai, where hundreds of employees are based, to conduct a “survey”. Documents and phones of several journalists were taken and the offices sealed.
Officers told local media the searches on Tuesday morning were part of a tax evasion investigation into the business operations of the BBC in India and several accounts and financial files were seized.
The BBC said it was fully cooperating with the raids, with some employees still in the offices on Tuesday evening. “Many staff have now left the building but some have been asked to remain and are continuing to cooperate with the ongoing inquiries,” it said. “We are supporting our staff during this time and continue to hope to have this situation resolved as soon as possible. Our output and journalism continues as normal and we are committed to serving our audiences in India.”
The UK government has so far declined to comment on the raids, although a Foreign Office official said they had spoken to the BBC. The BBC has previously been reluctant to seek formal political support when it comes to such incidents in an attempt to make clear it is separate from the British state.
The raids come as the BBC is at the centre of a controversy in India over a two-part documentary series, ‘India: The Modi Question’, which focused on the role that Modi, who was then the chief minister of Gujarat, played in violent Hindu-Muslim riots that ripped through his state in 2002 and left more than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, dead.
Modi has been followed for years by allegations of his complicity in the violence, and they led to him being banned from the US for almost a decade. The BBC documentary revealed that a British government document from the time had found Modi “directly responsible” for not stopping the killings of Muslims during the riots, and said the violence had “all the hallmarks of genocide”.
The series was not released in India but prompted an outcry from the Modi government, who accused the broadcaster of bias and a “colonial mindset”, pointing out that Modi was cleared of all charges by a supreme court panel in 2012.
Emergency laws were invoked to ban any links or clips of the documentary being shared on social media. In defiance of the ban, students across the country staged screenings of the documentary at universities and several were detained by police.
The BBC has stood by the documentary, stating it was “rigorously researched according to highest editorial standards”.
After the searches, Gaurav Bhatia, a spokesperson from Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), described the BBC as the “most corrupt organisation in the world” and accused it of “venomous, shallow and agenda-driven reporting”.
“If any company or organisation is working in India, they have to comply with the Indian law. Why are you scared if you are adhering to the law? The [tax] department should be allowed to do their work,” said Bhatia.
The raids of the BBC were widely criticised by members of the opposition. “At the time India holds the presidency of the G20 nations, prime minister Modi continues to brazenly show India’s slide into authoritarianism and dictatorship,” tweeted the Congress MP Gaurav Gogoi.
Akhilesh Yadav, the leader of the Samajwadi party, said: “When a government stands for fear and oppression instead of fearlessness, then one should realise the end is near.”
The BBC has been under increased scrutiny since the furore over the documentary, including a petition to the supreme court to have the broadcaster banned in India, which was dismissed by the judges.
There has been an increasingly pressured environment for the media since Modi came to power in 2014. Journalists and news organisations that have published work critical of the BJP government have faced harassment, raids, criminal cases and tax investigations, and India has dropped to 150 out of 180 in the World Press Freedom Index.
The Editors Guild of India described the actions of the income tax department as part of “the trend of using government agencies to intimidate and harass press organisations that are critical of government policies or the ruling establishment”.
The BBC is just the latest organisation to be hit with a tax evasion investigation after reports that have reflected poorly on the Modi government. Tax raids have been carried out on Oxfam and several thinktanks, while Amnesty International, which had documented the erosion of human rights and persecution of minorities, had to shutter its India operations in 2020 after its accounts were frozen by a central government agency.
Amnesty called the raid on the BBC “a blatant affront” to freedom of expression. “The Indian authorities are clearly trying to harass and intimidate the BBC over its critical coverage of the ruling Bharatiya Janata party,” said Aakar Patel, the chair of Amnesty International India’s board.
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