This Week in Asia

'Your existence is reason enough': in Modi's India, Muslim journalists face harassment, threats and assault

Multimedia journalist Shahid Tantray does not tell people his name any more, unless he really has to. He stopped after being attacked by an angry mob in New Delhi last year for the "crime" of being Muslim.

After realising he had a Koranic name, the men began hurling abuse at Tantray and ordered him to delete the photos he had taken in their neighbourhood. "I tried to calm them down but the crowd kept growing. Some of them started to slap me but I refused to delete the photographs I had taken," he told This Week In Asia.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The mob refused to relent even after the police arrived, following Tantray and his colleague to the local police station where the pair were forced to hole up for hours on end until the crowd outside finally dispersed. "My editors have been very supportive [since the incident]," Tantray said. "I have been advised to prioritise my own security."

Even in the absence of direct threats or attacks, Muslim journalists in many parts of the country regularly have to contend with an undercurrent of Islamophobia that not only makes it difficult for them to do their jobs, but also sees them targeted for online harassment.

"Officials, especially police, have often asked me about my 'motivations' for doing a story," said Ayesha Minhaz, a freelance journalist based in the southern city of Hyderabad. "As a Muslim woman journalist, you are made deeply aware that you don't have to work on sensitive stories to be hated in the Hindutva ecosystem, your existence is a reason enough."

During a reporting trip around Telangana state in 2018, the 33-year-old recalled being harassed by a local right-wing activist who stalked her on Facebook, showed up at the place she was staying and "kept arguing with me about beef-eating, and Aurangzeb [a 17th century Mughal emperor]".

For Dhanya Rajendran, editor of Bangalore-based news website The News Minute, the fact that she even has to think about a reporter's religion before sending them out to cover a story is "pathetic".

"During the Sabarimala temple protest, there was a lot misinformation being spread on Twitter by one of the members of the BJP about Muslim journalists. Although they eventually took it down, it had caused a lot of damage," Rajendran said, adding that after a woman reporter from her team was assaulted "we sent a Muslim male reporter to cover the protests only because he had a Hindu sounding first name [and] even then we asked him to be careful."

C K Prasad, a former Supreme Court judge and chairman of statutory watchdog the Press Council of India, dismissed reports of a decline in press freedom in the country as "totally unscientific", saying "if a journalist is killed in a road accident, you can't say there is a decline in freedom of the press".

He said his organisation had not received any official complaints about reporters being harassed because of their religion, but added that "if a journalist has been harassed, particularly by the state agencies, we are here to support them and protect their rights".

Though the incident scared him, he said it had not stopped him from reporting - even though it also spooked his employers, who have since asked him to be extra careful and avoid going out on assignment alone.

In India, "there are not many Muslim journalists around in the first place and secondly, it is easy to target them [so] in case they are accused of anything ... the punishment would be severe," Rashid said.

The 41-year-old was accused of instigating caste-based violence and jailed under the controversial Unlawful Activities Prevention Act. He remains incarcerated to this day.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2021. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from This Week in Asia

This Week in Asia4 min read
Pay Hike For Malaysia's 'Lazy' Civil Servants Sparks Discontent, Inflation Worries
An across-the-board pay hike for Malaysia's civil servants has stirred worries over inflation and grumbles from the public over alleged preferential treatment for a key vote bank represented by a mainly Malay bureaucracy infamous for its inefficiency
This Week in Asia4 min readWorld
Solomon Islands 'Locks In' China Ties With Another Pro-Beijing Leader As Bilateral Security Pact Still Rankles
The Solomon Islands has "locked in" ties with China after lawmakers chose another pro-Beijing prime minister, even though its government is expected to face greater scrutiny and demand for transparency in its engagement with Chinese officials, analys
This Week in Asia4 min read
India's Modi Risks Losing Key State Election Over Alleged Sex Scandal Involving Ex-PM's Grandson
A massive scandal surrounding a former Indian prime minister's grandson who is accused of raping and sexually assaulting hundreds of women has tainted a regional party allied with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with analysts saying it could cost the r

Related Books & Audiobooks