February 24, 2000
His Excellency Atal Behari Vajpayee
Prime Minister, Republic of India
Office of the Prime Minister
South Block
New Delhi 110 011
India
VIA FAX: ++91-11-301-6857
Your Excellency: The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply
concerned about the actions taken last week by a customs official in
Calcutta to censor the February 21, 2000, edition of Time, an
international weekly newsmagazine.
On February 16, customs agents at the Calcutta airport blocked the distribution
of 3,000 issues of Time magazine because they contained a one-page
interview with Gopal Godse, the brother of Mohandas Gandhi's assassin,
Nathuram Godse. In a letter to Time's Indian distributor dated
February 17, a customs officer explained that the shipment was stopped
"in order to prevent the dissemination of documents containing . . .
[material] which is derogatory to national prestige," and stipulated
that the magazines would be released only after "blackening the page
containing the 'Interview' on Mahatma Gandhi appearing on page 17."
The letter, signed by Bholanath Dasgupta, assistant commissioner of
customs in Calcutta, specified two grounds for censorship of the article:
"(1) It is defamatory and derogatory to the Father of the Nation, and
(2) It contains statements which can create communal disharmony."
Time's circulation in northeast India was disrupted by the move.
Subscribers' copies were delivered five days late, and vendors received
their shipments several days behind schedule. The Godse interview, meanwhile,
has been available on Time magazine's Web site since February
14, and has been widely circulated.
Click here to read the interview.
Sumit Dutta Majumdar, commissioner of customs in Calcutta, ordered the
censorship action, citing his authority under Section 11 of the Customs
Act. This is the second time that Majumdar has ordered the censorship
of Time magazine. Last year, an article on a dispute affecting
tiger conservation efforts--published in the magazine's September 20,
1999, edition--was also blacked out under his direction.
As an organization of journalists dedicated to the defense of press
freedom around the world, CPJ is dismayed that such actions are tolerated
in a country with a strong free press tradition. CPJ is particularly
troubled by news from a source in New Delhi that "starting this week,
senior airport customs officials all over India have been ordered by
their higher-ups to check the magazine thoroughly for any objectionable
stories."
We respectfully urge Your Excellency to order an immediate inquiry into
these allegations to determine whether there is a systematic effort
underway to censor the news, and to inform those responsible that your
administration will not condone such actions.
Yours Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director