How Government Controls Media in India
The relationship between the Indian government and the media it does not directly own operates through multiple channels that are collectively described as "media capture" — the process by which governments secure favourable media coverage without direct ownership or overt censorship. India's media control mechanisms operate at three levels: legal (using legislation and criminal law against critical journalists and outlets); economic (using government advertising dependency and licensing authority to reward compliant and punish critical media); and regulatory (using telecommunications, information technology, and broadcast regulations to limit independent media's operational environment). The RSF's 2026 World Press Freedom Index identifies all three mechanisms as operative in India: "Modi has introduced several new laws that give the government extraordinary power to control the media, censor news and silence critics, including the 2023 Telecommunications Ac...