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Indian police have raided the offices of a news website that’s under investigation for allegedly receiving funds from China, as well as the homes of several of its journalists, in what critics have described as an attack on one of India’s few remaining independent news outlets.

NewsClick, founded in 2009, is known as a rare Indian news outlet willing to criticise Prime Minister Narendra Modi. A number of other news organisations have been investigated for financial impropriety under Mr Modi’s Hindu nationalist government, as international monitors warn that press freedom is eroding in India.

Indian authorities registered a case against NewsClick and its journalists on August 17, weeks after a New York Times report alleged that the website had received funds from an American millionaire who, the Times wrote, has funded the spread of “Chinese propaganda”. NewsClick has denied the charges.

The case was filed under a wide-ranging anti-terrorism law that allows charges for “anti-national activities” and has been used against activists, journalists and critics of Mr Modi, some of whom have spent years in jail before going to trial. No one has been arrested in connection with NewsClick so far.

Two people, including NewClick’s editor in chief Prabir Purkayastha, were detained during the raids, and police carried away boxes of documents.

Two men sitting inside a vehicle as it drives, and a man standing outside takes a photo of them on a phone through the window.
NewsClick founder and Editor-in-Chief Prabir Purkayastha, left, is brought to a Delhi police office.(AP: Dinesh Joshi)

At least two journalists whose houses were raided by Delhi police said their devices were seized.

“Delhi police landed at my home. Taking away my laptop and phone,” journalist Abhisar Sharma wrote on social media platform X.

Delhi police did not immediately respond for a comment, but India’s Junior Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Anurag Thakur, told reporters that “if anyone has committed anything wrong, search agencies are free to carry out investigations against them”.

In August, Mr Thakur accused NewsClick of spreading an “anti-India agenda”, citing the New York Times, and of working with the opposition Indian National Congress party. Both NewsClick and the Congress party denied the accusations.

Three armed men, two in uniform, stand next to a large tree next to a building, behind a metal fence.

Authorities are investigating NewsClick under a wide-ranging anti-terrorism law that allows charges for “anti-national activities”.(AP: Piyush Nagpal)

Journalists ‘deeply concerned’

The Press Club of India (PCI) said it was “deeply concerned about the multiple raids conducted on the houses of journalists and writers associated with NewsClick”.

“The PCI stand in solidarity with the journalists and demands the government to come out with details,” it wrote in a statement on X.

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