India threatens to expel French journalist ahead of Macron visit

Vanessa Dougnac, a contributor to several French-language publications, who has been based in India for 22 years, received a notice from the home ministry last week saying that her work was "inimical" to national interests.

Security personnel check a vehicle near the building of India's Home Ministry in New Delhi, India. / Photo: Reuters Archive
Reuters Archive

Security personnel check a vehicle near the building of India's Home Ministry in New Delhi, India. / Photo: Reuters Archive

A French journalist said she was facing expulsion from India after two decades for what authorities have termed "malicious and critical" reportage, days before a state visit by President Emmanuel Macron.

Critics say that press freedom in the world's biggest democracy is increasingly under attack, with journalists who touch on sensitive topics often subjected to government rebuke.

The latest is Vanessa Dougnac, a contributor to several French-language publications including the weekly magazine Le Point, who has been based in India for 22 years.

Last week the home ministry sent a notice to the reporter saying her work was "inimical" to national interests.

"Her journalistic activities are malicious and critical in manner... they create biased perception about India," the notice said.

"In addition, her activities may also provoke disorder and disturb peace."

The notice gave Dougnac, who has an Indian spouse, until February 2 to challenge the ministry's decision to cancel her permanent residency — a move that would force her to leave the country.

Loading...

'India is my home'

Dougnac, who has reported on a number of flashpoint topics including the ongoing Maoist Naxalite insurgency in parts of rural India, denied "all the allegations and imputations" made against her in the letter.

"India is my home, a country which I deeply love and respect, and I have never engaged in any acts that are in any manner prejudicial to Indian interests," she said in a statement.

The home ministry and foreign ministry were contacted for comment.

The notice was issued to Dougnac a week before Macron's Thursday arrival in India, where he will be guest of honour at the annual Republic Day military parade.

Macron has eagerly courted India as a strategic partner and buyer of arms, and his visit reciprocates his invitation to Prime Minister Narendra Modi for last year's Bastille Day celebrations in Paris.

Read More
Read More

UK-based research firm accuses India of silencing journalists in Kashmir

Route 6