A Delhi court today allowed NewsClick HR head Amit Chakraborty’s plea seeking to turn approver in the UAPA case lodged against the media portal. The court also granted him pardon in the matter, Livelaw reported.
Additional sessions Judge Hardeep Kaur of Patiala House Court allowed the application moved by Chakraborty on December 23 last year in the case accusing NewsClick of receiving foreign funds to spread anti-India propaganda.
NewsClick founder Prabir Purkayastha and Chakraborty were arrested in October last year, following raids and searches at the media outlet’s office and over 50 journalists’ premises. Purkayastha remains in judicial custody.
In December, the court had granted the Delhi Police 60-day extension of judicial custody to finish its probe.
It had come after the freezing of the media portal’s bank accounts. NewsClick had termed the move an “administrative-legal siege” and said this had “left all our employees shocked” at the year-end festive season.
In a statement, the news outfit said it had been unable to make any bank payments since the evening of December 18. It said that it “appears to be a continuation of the administrative-legal siege of the news portal which began with the Enforcement Directorate raids in February 2021, followed by an IT department survey in September 2021, and the October 3, 2023 crackdown by the Delhi Police Special Cell”.
NewsClick has repeatedly denied the charges against it. Its earlier statement said that “NewsClick has always complied with the laws of the land, including all tax regulations. The claims levelled by the Income Tax Department are without any basis.”
The arrest in the case was made after The New York Times alleged that NewsClick was among Chinese propaganda outlets funded by US businessman Neville Roy Singham. Later, in a four-page rebuttal, Singham had called the NYT article “misleading” and an “innuendo-laden hit piece”.
The allegations against the news portal revolve around China-linked foreign funding violations. The FIR in the case stated that Purkayastha, Chakravarty and Singham had allegedly discussed “how to create a map of India without Kashmir and to show Arunachal Pradesh as disputed area”.
In November, the Enforcement Directorate summoned Singham in the case, and the Delhi police had sought “financial” details of five companies linked to him in a letter to the US authorities.
NewsClick denied all the allegations, terming the police action as an attempt to “stifle fearless voices”.
Newslaundry had earlier reported that with the NewsClick office sealed, and the journalists’ devices seized, the news portal was struggling to publish with borrowed devices. Read about it here.
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