Pawan Jaiswal made national headlines after reporting that impoverished primary school students in a district in Uttar Pradesh state were fed bread with salt instead of a mandated healthy meal.
This is Pawan Jaiswal , the #Mirzapur reporter who broke the roti + salt in mid day meal story. He has been booked by @mirzapurpolice for allegedly conspiring against the @UPGovt . In this video he reiterates he reported what he saw . @IndEditorsGuild please take cognizance ! pic.twitter.com/5mU47uufAo
— Alok Pandey (@alok_pandey) September 2, 2019
The report led to widespread criticism of the local government controlled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which responded by launching a criminal probe against Jaiswal.
"It is a cruel and classic case of shooting the messenger," the Editors Guild of India said in a statement on Monday.
"It is shocking that instead of taking action to fix what is wrong on the ground, the government has filed criminal cases against the journalist."
The Editors Guild of India has issued a statement pic.twitter.com/F3q4WAlphn
— Editors Guild of India (@IndEditorsGuild) September 2, 2019
Dozens of journalists shouted slogans outside the district office on Tuesday, demanding that the investigation of Jaiswal be called off.
Journalists in India have complained of deteriorating media freedoms and vicious online attacks over the past few years in the world's largest democracy.
Laws have frequently been deployed by politicians from all parties seeking to stifle social media criticism.
Earlier this year, a ruling party activist was arrested for posting a meme on opposition West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. She was later released on bail by the Supreme Court.
A journalist in northeastern Manipur state was jailed last year for allegedly criticising the state's BJP chief minister and Modi.
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