India state assembly elections 2022: Journalist safety guide

Passengers wearing face masks wait to get tested for COVID-19 at a railway station in Mumbai on January 5, 2022. The virus is one of many obstacles facing journalists in India as they prepare to cover legislative assembly elections in five states in February and March. (AP/Rafiq Maqbool)

PDF: English,ਪੰਜਾਬੀ, हिन्दी

India is scheduled to hold legislative assembly elections in the states of Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Goa, Uttarakhand, and Manipur in February and March 2022.

Media workers covering any of these elections should be aware of the potential risk of physical attack, intimidation, and harassment; online bullying; arrest and detention; and government restrictions on reporting, including access to the internet. Five journalists in India died as a result of their reporting in 2021, topping CPJ’s global records for the year; seven were imprisoned in relation to their work as of December 1, 2021. Hundreds in India’s media fraternity have died after contracting COVID-19, according to a database compiled by the Network of Women in Media India. Amid sectarian tensions journalists have faced reprisals for their religion, gender, and identity and been accused of spreading communal disharmony for reporting on religious violence.

As Vijay Vineet, a former Jansandesh newspaper editor now freelancing for the website Newsclick in Uttar Pradesh, told CPJ via phone, “No organization in Uttar Pradesh provides any safety training or does enough for protection of their reporters.”

“In a closely fought election, as we are realizing it has become, there is a potential for violence,” he said.

CPJ Emergencies has updated its safety guide for journalists covering the elections, containing information for editors, reporters, and photojournalists on how to prepare for the legislative assembly elections, and how to mitigate digital, physical, and psychological risk.

Contacts and resources

Journalists requiring assistance can contact CPJ Emergencies via emergencies@cpj.org or CPJ’s Asia program via researcher Sonali Dhawan at sdhawan@cpj.org or India correspondent Kunal Majumder at kmajumder@cpj.org.

In addition, CPJ’s resource center has additional information and tools for pre-assignment preparation and post-incident assistance.

Editor’s safety checklist

Editors and newsrooms may assign journalists to stories at short notice in the run-up to, during, and after the legislative assembly elections. This checklist includes key questions and steps to consider to reduce risk for staff.

Staff considerations
Equipment and transport
General considerations

For more information about risk assessment and planning, see the CPJ Resource Center.


A man wearing a facemask as a preventive measure against the Covid-19 coronavirus speaks on his mobile phone at a market in New Delhi on January 11, 2022. (AFP/Sajjad Hussain)

Digital Safety: Online harassment and misinformation campaigns

Online harassment, including targeted online campaigns, are likely to increase during the election period, especially in Uttar Pradesh, India’s biggest state. Recent, sophisticated examples include the app, Tek Fog, which encouraged mass distribution of offensive messages about specific journalists. Hate speech in English, Hindi and Bengali spiked on Facebook during the pandemic, The Wire reported, with women and minorities as popular targets, some being offered for sale through demeaning fake auctions.  Media workers are often targeted by online attackers who want to discredit the journalist and their work. This can often involve coordinated harassment and misinformation campaigns that leave the journalist unable to use social media, essentially forcing them offline. Protecting against online attacks is not easy, however there are steps that journalists can take to better protect themselves and their accounts.

Account security

Online harassers will often use personal information from your social media accounts to target and harass you. Take the following steps to better protect your accounts and your data:

During an attack

Digital Safety: Basic device preparedness

While covering an election, journalists are likely to be using their mobile phone for reporting and filing stories as well as being in contact with colleagues and sources. This has digital security implications if journalists are detained and their phones are seized or broken. Before going out on assignment it is good practice to:

For more information about digital safety, please see CPJ’s digital safety guide. For more about Pegasus spyware see CPJ’s safety advisory


Digital Safety: Securing and storing materials

It is important to have good protocols around the storing and securing of materials during election times. If a journalist is detained, their devices may be taken and searched, which could have serious consequences for the journalist and their sources. Devices can also be broken or stolen while out covering the election, which may lead to the loss of information if it is not backed up.


Digital Safety: Safer communications

Knowing how to communicate more securely with others is an important part of your digital safety, especially as more journalists are working remotely due to COVID-19. Journalists and editors are increasingly using conferencing platforms instead of meeting in person, and taking steps to secure who can access these calls or webinars is essential for protecting employees and sources.

Using Zoom

To better protect yourself when using Zoom, consider the following guidelines:

For more information, see CPJ’s digital safety advice for journalists working from home.


Physical Safety: COVID-19 considerations

Maintaining physical distancing at any election event or related protest will be challenging. Large crowds are commonplace, members of the public may not wear face coverings/face masks, and media workers could be confined to a particular area in close proximity to other journalists. Such confinement could potentially expose them to virus droplets, as well as verbal or physical attack from hostile members of the public, who could deliberately cough or sneeze over them.

Be aware that people shouting or chanting can result in the spread of virus droplets, therefore increasing media workers’ level of exposure to coronavirus infection.

For further detailed COVID-19 reporting guidance, see CPJ’s safety advisory.

Rakesh Tikait, a leader of Bharatiya Kisan Union, one of the largest farmers’ unions, holds the Indian national flag as farmers vacate a protest site at Ghazipur near the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border, India, on December 15, 2021. (Reuters/Anushree Fadnavis)

Physical Safety: Reporting from election rallies and protests

During elections, media workers frequently attend crowded rallies, campaign events, live broadcasts, and protests.

To help minimize the risks at such events, media workers should consider the following safety advice.

Political events and rallies

Protests

Planning
Awareness and positioning
If tear gas is likely to be used by the police

The use of tear gas can result in sneezing, coughing, spitting, crying, and the production of mucus that obstructs breathing. In some cases, individuals may vomit, and breathing may become labored. Such symptoms could potentially increase media workers’ level of exposure to coronavirus infection via airborne virus droplets. Individuals who suffer from respiratory issues like asthma, who are listed in the COVID-19 vulnerable category, should therefore avoid covering crowd events and protests if tear gas is likely to be deployed.

In addition, evidence suggests that tear gas can actually increase an individual’s susceptibility to pathogens such as coronavirus, as highlighted by NPR.

For further guidance about dealing with exposure to and the effects of tear gas, please refer to CPJ’s civil disorder advisory.

Physical assault

Protesters have previously assaulted journalists in India and in October 2021, CPJ documented the death of freelancer Raman Kashyap from injuries sustained while covering a protest by local farmers that turned violent.  When dealing with aggression, consider the following:


Paramilitary troopers and Punjab Police personnel patrol in a market area, ahead of the state assembly elections in Amritsar, India on January 10, 2022. (AFP/Narinder Nanu)

Physical Safety: Reporting in a hostile community

Journalists are on occasion required to report in areas or communities that are hostile to the media or outsiders. This can happen if a community perceives that the media does not fairly represent them or portrays them in a negative light. During an election campaign, journalists may be required to work for extended periods among communities that are hostile to the media.

Exit mobile version