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On Friday, 10 September, officials from the Income Tax Department raided the offices of news-media organisations – NewsClick and Newslaundry.
A day later, in his official statement on the matter, Newslaundry CEO and Co-Founder, Abhinandan Sekhri, said:
Sekhri also said that the Income Tax department, which raided their offices at approximately 12:15 in the afternoon, looked through all computer devices on the premises, including his personal mobile phone, and the data from these devices was downloaded.
However, the officials said that they were conducting separate “survey operations” and not “raids”. And that the operations were being conducted to verify certain tax payment details and remittances made by the organisations.
The DIGIPUB News India Foundation expressed their condemnation against the raids by stating that they see a 'sustained pattern of intimidation' against independent news websites.
"DIGIPUB is shocked by the harassment meted out by Income-Tax officials to the editors of the two publications. Phones and laptops were impounded during the search and data was cloned. This violates the right to privacy. It also compromises journalistic sources," they said, in a statement on 11 September.
The Editors Guild of India, on Friday, issued a press statement condemning the IT raids on the offices of Newsclick and Newslaundry, saying that it was "deeply disturbed" by the development.
The Guild observed that the IT team that conducted the raid copied data from Sekhri's laptop and mobile, asserting that the action was in violation of the legal provisions.
"This is clearly beyond the mandate of surveys as defined under section 133A of the Income Tax Act, which only allows data pertaining to the investigation to be copied, and certainly not personal and professional data of journalists. It is also in violation of procedures laid out in the Information Technology Act, 2000," the statement said.
The press release, which has been signed by President Seema Mustafa, General Secretary Sanjay Kapoor, and Treasurer Anant Nath, stated:
On Sunday, 12 September, the Foundation for Media Professionals (FMP) condemned the "survey" as described by the Income Tax department.
On Sekhri's phone and laptop being seized and their contents being downloaded, the organisation said, "This is an evident breach of the confidentiality of journalistic sources. Source confidentiality is sacrosanct in journalism, and is a global cornerstone of the professional code of media ethics."
Editor-in-chief of Newsclick Prabir Purkayastha, in his official statement, said that the "survey" in their office continued from 12 noon to midnight. His phone was impounded and documents, which the IT department referred to as "loose papers" were taken, along with email dumps and financial accounts.
The statement also said, "The raid yesterday appears to relate to the same false and unfounded allegations being investigated by the Enforcement Directorate and the Economic Offences Wing, Delhi Police. We have these allegations challenged in the Courts."
This was the second such action against both publications.
Sekhri said, “We have nothing to hide and have done everything by the book and are not in any breach or violation of any law. We conduct our business honestly and with integrity.
"We will not be intimidated. We will continue to do our work, and speak truth to power," said Prabir.
(Correction: An earlier version of this story wrongly termed Abhinandan Sekhri as the Editor-in-Chief of Newslaundry. The error is regretted.)
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