Journo Swati Chaturvedi Wins RSF ‘Courage’ Award For Book on Modi

Despite harassment from trolls, Chaturvedi published her book dealing with the inner workings of Modi’s IT cell.

The Quint
India
Updated:
Journalist Swati Chaturvedi won the ‘Courage’ award in an annual ceremony by Reporters Without Borders, for her book I am a Troll: Inside the Secret World of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Digital Army.
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Journalist Swati Chaturvedi won the ‘Courage’ award in an annual ceremony by Reporters Without Borders, for her book I am a Troll: Inside the Secret World of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Digital Army.
(Photo: Canva/The Quint)

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Indian journalist Swati Chaturvedi, who authored the book I am a Troll: Inside the Secret World of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Digital Army, was given the Press Freedom Award for Courage, in an annual event by Reporters without Borders.

Chaturvedi’s book, published in 2016, exposes the online trolls affiliated with the BJP and how they “incite online communal tension and abuse, and sexually harass journalists, opposition politicians and anyone who questions them”, according to its description on Goodreads.

While presenting the award to her at the Getty Images Gallery in London’s Fitzrovia, the organization said that Chaturvedi was “subjected to virulent online harassment for investigating the ‘IT cell’ within the Bharatiya Janata Party, that is notorious for keeping an army of angry trolls”, Scroll reported.

Despite this, Chaturvedi’s work, both within and outside the realm of her book, as a reflection of the inner workings of the government, continue to be her force-driver, she says. In an interview with The Gulf News, a website she has also written for, she said: “I have always been doing the same thing, since the day I started my career. I have remained the same. I speak the truth as I perceive it and that’s that.”

Chaturvedi was one among four nominees for the award under the ‘Courage’ category.

The other nominees included Paolo Borrometi (editor of anti-mafia investigative site La Spia in Italy), Cigdem Toker (independent Turkish journalist and columnist for Cumhuriyet) and Hamid El Mahdaoui (founder editor of Badil.info, who was sentenced to a jail term of three years in June in Morocco), The Gulf News report added.

Other awardees of the night included Matthew Caruana Galizia from Malta, who bagged the award for “impact”, for tracking down those who killed his mother, Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was assassinated in 2017 after she began investigations into corruption, Scroll reported.

Being recognized for her efforts in her #BabaeAko campaign, the Filipino equivalent of the #MeToo movement, in President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration in Philippines, Espina-Varona won the prize for “independence” as well, the report added.

(With inputs from Scroll and The Gulf News)

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Published: 09 Nov 2018,11:34 AM IST

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