BBC India offices raided by tax officials after critical documentary
- Police sealed off the New Delhi office, which occupies two floors, and half a dozen officers were stationed outside to prevent people from entering or leaving
- Last month, the broadcaster aired a documentary alleging PM Narendra Modi ordered police to ignore sectarian riots in Gujarat state, where he was once premier
Indian tax authorities raided the BBC’s New Delhi and Mumbai offices on Tuesday, weeks after the broadcaster aired a documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s actions during deadly sectarian riots in 2002.
Police sealed off the New Delhi office, which occupies two floors, and half a dozen officers were stationed outside to prevent people from entering or leaving.
A BBC employee based in New Delhi said the tax raid was in progress and that officials were “confiscating all phones”.
An official at the scene said: “There is government procedure happening inside the office,” declining to disclose their department.
Another member of BBC staff based in Mumbai confirmed the broadcaster’s office in India’s commercial hub was also being raided.
India’s Income Tax Department could not be reached for comment.