New Guidelines: Journalists Can Lose PIB Accreditation If They Violate National Security

New Delhi: The new Central Media Accreditation Guidelines-2022 released by the Centre is a mixed bag for journalists.

Every journalist in India vies for government accreditation. Having a PIB accreditation card is a matter of prestige.

The PIB card

A PIB accreditation card provides access to journalists inside government buildings within Delhi-NCR and important government events. Press accreditation cards are issued by the respective state governments to journalists in other states.

The PIB issues around 3,000 press accreditation cards every year. Railway fare concessions and a Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) card are other benefits that come with a PIB accreditation card.

New guidelines

However, now, according to the new Central Media Accreditation Guidelines-2022 released by the Centre, there is a stringent provision under which a journalist can lose government accreditation if the person “acts in a manner which is prejudicial to the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the state, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, decency or morality or in relation to contempt of court, defamation or incitement of an offence”.

The new accreditation guidelines were announced by the Press Information Bureau (PIB), the official communication arm of the central government has also opened up government accreditation for web journalists for the first time. News aggregators will remain out of the ambit.

A senior government official told News18 that the entire process of accreditation has been streamlined, grey zones have been removed, rules have full clarity and there is no scope for interpretation or fudging. “The new rules are reformative. They are focused on professional work. Digital media has been given full recognition which was earlier lacking. For the first time in history foreign media will get accreditation for full term of J Visa,” the official was quoted as saying.

The official also pointed out that a journalist was earlier arrested for spying for China but his accreditation could not be cancelled as there was no provision.

What the new guidelines say

  • For the first time Accreditation Rules specifically state ‘working journalist.’ Till now they were referred to as ‘representatives.’
  • The new policy also lists out other instances in which a journalist’s accreditation can be suspended. This includes person charged with a “serious cognisable offence”, one who uses the accreditation cards for non-journalistic activities, leaves the organisation on whose behalf the person was accredited or the organisation ceases to exist.
  • The accredited media person will not use the words “Accredited to the Government of India” on public or social media profile, visiting cards, letterheads or any other published work.

Digital media

For accreditation of journalists in digital media, the applicants will have to report the website’s average monthly unique visitor count of the last six months certified by its CAG-approved/empanelled auditors. One digital media journalist will be eligible for accreditation from news websites with 10 to 50 lakh unique visitors. Four journalists can get accredited from news websites with over a crore unique visitors a month.

The new policy has set up fixed quotas for journalists working in newspapers, magazines and TV news channels. Foreign news media working journalists will be issued PIB cards till the validity of their J visa.

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