Mumbai Police Commissioner Param Bir Singh
Mumbai Police Commissioner Param Bir Singh has been one of the targets of Republic TV's ire. Image Credit: PTI

Mumbai: Police in Mumbai on Sunday arrested the chief executive of a right-wing television news broadcaster on suspicion of manipulating ratings figures, escalating a clash that has roiled India’s voluble but increasingly partisan media scene.

Police said they had arrested Vikas Khanchandani, chief executive of ARG Outlier Media, at his home in Mumbai, India’s financial capital. ARG owns Republic TV, a news network that broadcasts in English and Hindi and that has jumped in the ratings with its embrace of populist causes and its sympathy toward Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his nationalist Hindu policies.

The authorities, which had earlier questioned Khanchandani twice, said there was enough evidence to suggest that he had direct knowledge about manipulating the ratings figures. He has not been formally charged, but investigators said they arrested him after he refused to cooperate.

ARG could not be reached for comment, but Republic TV leapt to his defence. Arnab Goswami, co-founder of the network and a pugnacious talk show host with the broadcaster, said police had botched the investigation, and the arrests of Khanchandani and of others at Republic TV were retaliation for the network’s tough coverage of the Mumbai force.

“It is an illegal arrest: No papers were served,” Goswami said on a broadcast Sunday. “I am requesting all the people across the country to raise their voice against these methods of the Mumbai police.”

The arrest of Khanchandani comes as the Indian news media slides deeper into an increasingly polarised atmosphere.

Republic TV is one of a number of outlets that have prospered under the government of Modi and his governing Hindu nationalist party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP. Indian news outlets, particularly the television networks, have taken an increasingly conservative turn. Programmes on those networks regularly denounce critics of the government’s record on human rights, income inequality, joblessness or the coronavirus pandemic as nonpatriots or separatist sympathisers.

In recent years, Republic TV has made a name for itself by embracing right-wing causes and aggressively backing Modi’s administration. Senior officials routinely appear on Republic, interviews they seldom give to other news outlets considered to be more critical of the government.

But the network’s relationship with the local administration in Mumbai is more fraught. The state government is run by a coalition of parties that resisted the BJP’s effort to join.

Since then, the rivalry between Modi’s administration and the regional government in Maharashtra, the state that includes Mumbai, has intensified. Both have used public institutions, including investigating agencies, to target each other.

Accusations of ratings manipulation have brought those tensions to the fore. Police have said that Republic TV inflated its audience ratings by paying people the equivalent of a few dollars a month to tune in to the station and leave their televisions on. According to a 1,400-page charge sheet filed by Mumbai police, the alleged practice has been going on for about two years.

The accusations have led to increased scrutiny of how ratings data are compiled. The data, gathered by an industry group, can make the difference between a strong and weak year in terms of advertising revenue.

Faiz Ullah, a media professor at Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai, said initial investigations seemed to suggest that the ratings system was open to manipulation.

“People have been given a free TV, their power bills paid and given some cash to watch particular news channels,” Ullah said of the practice of artificially bolstering the figures. “There is no transparency. The system needs to change.”

The industry group behind the ratings data, the Broadcast Audience Research Council, has said it will suspend issuing viewing figures while it conducts a review.

So far, authorities have arrested 13 people on suspicion of cheating, forgery or criminal conspiracy in relation to the ratings manipulation allegations.

Police in Mumbai have been circling Republic TV for other reasons, too. Early last month, they arrested Goswami, the face of Republic TV, on suspicion of abetting a suicide. He was later released on bail.

Citing bias from officials in Mumbai, Republic TV has requested that the ratings investigation be shifted away from local authorities and given to the Central Bureau of Investigation, which is under the control of Modi.

Last week, the Indian Supreme Court turned down a plea by Republic TV seeking protection against arrest for its employees.