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Today: April 11, 2025
Today: April 11, 2025

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election

CORRECTION India Election Democracy
April 15, 2024

NEW DELHI (AP) โ€” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government are increasingly wielding strong-arm tactics to subdue political opponents and critics of the ruling Hindu-nationalist party.

A decade into power, and on the cusp of securing five more years, the Modi government is reversing Indiaโ€™s decadeslong commitment to multiparty democracy and secularism.

The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party has brought corruption charges against many officials from its main rival, the Congress Party, but few convictions. Dozens of politicians from other opposition parties are under investigation or in jail. And just last month, Modiโ€™s government froze the Congress partyโ€™s bank accounts for what it said was non-payment of taxes.

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
CORRECTION India Election Democracy

The Modi administration says the country's investigating agencies are independent and that its democratic institutions are robust, pointing to high voter turnout in recent elections that have delivered Modi's party a clear mandate.

Yet civil liberties are under attack. Peaceful protests have been crushed with force. A once free and diverse press is threatened. Violence is on the rise against the Muslim minority. And the countryโ€™s judiciary increasingly aligns with the executive branch.

To better understand how Modi is reshaping India and what is at stake in an election that begins April 19 and runs through June 1, the AP spoke with a lawyer, a journalist, and an opposition politician.

Here are their stories:

DEFENDING MODI'S CRITICS

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

Mihir Desai has fought for the civil liberties and human rights of Indiaโ€™s most disadvantaged communities, such as the poor and Muslims, for nearly four decades.

The 65-year-old lawyer from India's financial capital Mumbai is now working on one of his โ€“ and the countryโ€™s โ€“ most high-profile cases: defending a dozen political activists, journalists and lawyers jailed in 2018 on accusations of plotting to overthrow the Modi government. The accusations, he says, are baseless โ€“ just one of the governmentโ€™s all-too-frequent and audacious efforts to silence critics.

One of the defendants in the case, a Jesuit priest and longtime civil rights activist, died at age 84 after about nine months in custody. The other defendants remain in jail, charged under anti-terror laws that rarely result in convictions.

โ€œFirst authorities came up with a theory that they planned to kill Modi. Now they are being accused of being terrorist sympathizers,โ€ he said.

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

The point of it all, Desai believes, is to send a message to any would-be critics.

According to digital forensics experts at U.S.-based Arsenal Consulting, the Indian government hacked into the computers of some of the accused and planted files that were later used as evidence against them.

To Desai, this is proof that the Modi government has โ€œweaponizedโ€ the countryโ€™s once-independent investigative agencies.

He sees threats to Indian democracy all around him. Last year, the government removed the countryโ€™s chief justice as one of three people who appoint commissioners overseeing elections; Modi and the opposition leader in parliament are the others. Now, one of Modiโ€™s cabinet ministers has a vote in the process, giving the ruling party a 2-1 majority.

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

โ€œItโ€™s a death knell to free and fair elections,โ€ Desai said.

A POLITICIAN'S PLIGHT IN KASHMIR

Waheed-Ur-Rehman Para, 35, was long seen as an ally in the Indian governmentโ€™s interests in Kashmir. He worked with young people in the majority-Muslim, semi-autonomous region and preached to them about the benefits of embracing India and its democratic institutions โ€“ versus seeking independence, or a merger with Pakistan.

Beginning in 2018, though, Para was viewed with suspicion by the Modi government for alleged connections to anti-India separatists. Since then, he has been jailed twice: in 2019 on suspicion that he and other political opponents could stoke unrest; and in 2020 on charges of supporting militant groups -- charges he denies.

The accusations stunned Para, whose Peopleโ€™s Democratic Party once ruled Kashmir in an alliance with Modiโ€™s party.

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Elections Democracy

But he believes the motivation was clear: โ€œI was arrested to forcibly endorse the governmentโ€™s 2019 decision,โ€ he said, referring to a clampdown on the resistance in Kashmir after the elimination of the region's semi-autonomous status.

Modi's administration argues the move was necessary to fully integrate the disputed region with India and foster economic development there.

After his 2020 arrest, Para remained in jail for nearly two years, often in solitary confinement, and was subjected to โ€œabusive interrogations,โ€™โ€™ according to U.N. experts.

โ€œMy crime was that I wanted the integration of Kashmir, not through the barrel of the gun,โ€ said Para, who is seeking to represent Kashmir's main city in the upcoming election.

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

Para sees his own plight within the larger context of the Modi governmentโ€™s effort to silence perceived opponents, especially those with ties to Muslims, who make up 14% of Indiaโ€™s population.

โ€œIt is a huge ethical question โ€ฆ that the largest democracy in the world is not able to assimilate, or offer dignity to, the smallest pocket of its people,โ€ he said.

The campaign to turn once-secular India into a Hindu republic may help Modi win elections in the short term, Para said, but something much bigger will be lost.

โ€œIt risks the whole idea of this countryโ€™s diversity,โ€ he said.

A JOURNALIST FIGHTS CHARGES

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

In October 2020, independent journalist Sidheeq Kappan was arrested while trying to report on a government clampdown in the northern Uttar Pradesh state ruled by Modiโ€™s party.

For days, authorities had been struggling to contain protests and outcry over a gruesome rape case. Those accused of the crime were four upper caste Hindu men, while the victim belonged to the Dalit community, the lowest rung of India's caste hierarchy.

Kappan, a 44-year-old Muslim, was detained and jailed before he even reached the crime site, accused of intending to incite violence. After two years in jail, his case reached Indiaโ€™s top court in 2022. While he was quickly granted bail, the case against him is ongoing.

Kappanโ€™s case is not unique, and he says it highlights how India is becoming increasingly unsafe for journalists. Under intense pressure from the state, many Indian news organizations have become more pliant and supportive of government policies,

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

โ€œThose who have tried to be independent have come under relentless attack by the government,โ€ he said.

Foreign journalists are banned from reporting in Kashmir, for example. Same goes for Indiaโ€™s northeast Manipur state, which has been embroiled in ethnic violence for almost a year.

Television news is increasingly dominated by stations touting the governmentโ€™s Hindu nationalist agenda, such as a new citizenship law that excludes Muslim migrants. Independent TV stations have been temporarily shut down, and newspapers that run articles critical of Modiโ€™s agenda find that any advertising from the government โ€“ an important source of revenue โ€“ quickly dries up.

Last year, the India offices of the BBC were raided on tax irregularities just days after it aired a documentary critical of Modi.

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

The advocacy group Reporters Without Borders ranks India 161st on a worldwide list of countriesโ€™ press freedoms.

Kappan said he has barely been able to report news since his arrest. The trial keeps him busy, requiring him to travel to a court hundreds of miles away every other week. The time and money required for his trial have made it difficult for him to support his wife and three children, Kappan said.

โ€œIt is affecting their education, their mental health,โ€ he said.

___

In Modi's India, opponents and journalists feel the squeeze ahead of election
India Election Democracy

Associated Press writers Piyush Nagpal and Subramoney Iyer in Kerala, India, contributed to this report.

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