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@Evening: 🗞️ Tax Ops At BBC Offices In Delhi, Mumbai — Let's Break It Down

Karan KambleFeb 15, 2023, 07:02 PM | Updated 07:02 PM IST


↗️ There's another way on the BBC matter

The BBC (Wikimedia Commons)

India is not handling the misinformation challenges it's facing from Western news organisations, like the BBC, sensibly, R Jagannathan writes.

Context: The Income Tax Department on Tuesday conducted a survey operation at the BBC's offices in Delhi and Mumbai.

  • The purpose was to ascertain possible violation by the British broadcaster of transfer pricing rules and profit diversions.

  • The BBC has apparently been under the radar of Indian tax authorities for alleged non-compliance for an extended period, which has led to several notices being issued to the broadcaster.

  • But the BBC is said to have "remained defiant."

  • The tax survey comes just weeks after the UK's national broadcaster aired a two-part documentary series attacking PM Narendra Modi's tenure as chief minister during the Gujarat riots of 2002.

  • Wisdom of the approach. In the process of investigating possible tax evasion, India has only invested the BBC with more credibility than it deserves.

    • The only way to undercut the BBC is to understand where it is coming from, and steadily undermine its claims to objectivity.

  • The BBC derives its constitutional legitimacy from a royal charter it received from King George V, starting from 1 January 1927.

  • The royal charter grants the BBC “independence”, but not freedom from bias.

  • So, it doesn't make sense to attack its independence, because that's not the same thing as neutrality, freedom from bias, or even fairness.

  • It merely means that the producers of its programmes are free to do their own stories, which includes pandering to their own biases.

  • The real question is: Where does the BBC get its anti-India bias from?

    • We can even ask whether its bias is essentially anti-Hindu, since it would seldom consider covering the ethnic cleansing of Hindus from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or Jammu and Kashmir.

  • Not to forget, the BBC has a licence to splurge.

  • Thanks to the huge funding it receives from taxpayers, not through the budget, but from a licence fee, it's able to indulge its own biases.

  • Earn your viewership. There's now a popular movement to defund the BBC.

    • The Indian diaspora must be encouraged to join this movement unless the BBC gets out of bed with its chosen ideological partners — the left-liberals and Islamists of various hues.

  • Unless the BBC is forced to seek audiences from those it can now choose to treat with disdain, it will not even try to reduce its bias.

  • Bottom line: The market is the best way to break the ideological lenses the BBC chooses to wear.

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