PIB Fact Check Unit – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Fri, 02 Aug 2024 11:19:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png PIB Fact Check Unit – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw On Fact Check Unit https://artifex.news/only-centre-can-validate-facts-related-to-it-minister-ashwini-vaishnaw-on-fact-check-unit-6247867rand29/ Fri, 02 Aug 2024 11:19:09 +0000 https://artifex.news/only-centre-can-validate-facts-related-to-it-minister-ashwini-vaishnaw-on-fact-check-unit-6247867rand29/ Read More “Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw On Fact Check Unit” »

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The Fact Check Unit was notified on March 20 under the Information Technology Rules, 2021.

New Delhi:

The Centre is best suited to determine whether a particular fact related to it is correct or wrong, Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said on Friday while making the government’s stand clear on the PIB’s Fact Check Unit.

He was replying to a supplementary query during the Question Hour in the Rajya Sabha related to the Supreme Court’s stay on the Centre’s notification on setting up a fact-checking unit.

“The amendment in the IT Intermediary Rules which has been stayed by the Supreme Court, is still under contest but the fundamental principle is, our point is, anything related to the government of India, only the government can say whether it is a correct fact or a wrong fact. That is our stand,” Vaishnaw, the Union Information and Broadcasting Minister, said.

The Supreme Court in March this year stayed the Centre’s notification on setting up a fact-checking unit under the Press Information Bureau (PIB) to identify fake news about the Union government.

The Fact Check Unit was notified on March 20 under the Information Technology Rules, 2021, by the Ministry of Electronics and IT.

A bench headed by Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud set aside the March 11 order of the Bombay High Court which had refused to grant interim stay on setting up the FCU under the amended IT Rules to identify fake and false content on social media about the Union government.

Replying to another supplementary question, Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting L Murugan said the Centre has no plans to establish regional fact checking units under the PIB.

While speaking on incidents of factually incorrect information being circulated, without naming West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, Murugan cited the example of a chief minister who recently came to Delhi to attend government think tank Niti Aayog’s meeting and claimed that her microphone was switched off, terming the statement “misleading”.

“Last week also a chief minister came here in Delhi to attend a NITI Aayog meeting. In that meeting she mentioned that her mike was switched off. But we had an issue that this statement is misleading,” said the minister.

However, he clarified that the Centre does not have plans to establish regional fact checking units.

“We don’t have a plan to establish fact check units at the regional level.

The Fact Check Unit is in Delhi. We have a very good system here,” Murugan said.

When the minister was challenged to prove by a member his statement that incidents of fake news are most rampant in West Bengal, he agreed to authenticate his claim with data.

A Fact Check Unit (FCU) has been set up under Press Information Bureau, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, in November, 2019 to counter fake news relating to the central government. After verifying the authenticity of news from authorised sources in ministries/departments, FCU posts correct information on its social media platforms.

PIB under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting has its headquarters at New Delhi and 5 zones comprising 19 regional offices in various states.

The regional office at Kolkata comes under East Zone and at present has 18 permanent employees and 1 contractual employee. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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Supreme Court Puts On Hold Centre’s Notification On Its Fact-Check Unit https://artifex.news/supreme-court-puts-on-hold-centres-notification-on-its-fact-check-unit-5281535rand29/ Thu, 21 Mar 2024 07:49:51 +0000 https://artifex.news/supreme-court-puts-on-hold-centres-notification-on-its-fact-check-unit-5281535rand29/ Read More “Supreme Court Puts On Hold Centre’s Notification On Its Fact-Check Unit” »

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A day after the Centre notified the Fact Check Unit under the Press Information Bureau to “address the challenge of fake news”, the Supreme Court today paused the notification, setting aside the Bombay High Court’s go-ahead to the government’s move.

A bench of Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud, Justice JB Pardiwala and Justice Manoj Misra said the matter concerns freedom of expression. The court, however, did not comment on the merits of the case.

Stand-up comic Kunal Kamra and the Editors Guild of India had approached Bombay High Court, seeking a direction to restrain the Centre from notifying the Fact Check Unit.

The provision for a Fact Check Unit was part of the amendments to the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021, brought by the Centre last year.

Under the rules, if this unit comes across or is informed about any posts that are fake, false, and contain misleading facts about the business of the government, it would flag them to social media intermediaries. Once such a post is flagged, the intermediary has the option of taking it down or putting a disclaimer. In taking the second option, the intermediary risks legal action.

The petitioners had expressed concerns of censorship and said the new rules would restrict users from expressing themselves freely on social media. They had said the social media intermediaries would readily remove posts flagged by the government’s Fact Check Unit to avoid legal troubles.

Mr Kamra also challenged the new IT rules for violating his right to work as a political satirist and expressed fear of losing his social media access if his content is flagged by the Fact Check Unit. The rules will allow the government to flag any content critical of its policies, he said.

The Centre had responded that the rules were issued in public interest to crack down on fake news. It had also said the fact-check will be based on evidence and such decisions can be challenged in courts.

The Centre also said political opinions, satire and comedy are not linked to government business; the petitioners have argued that ‘business of the Central Government’ is a “vague” area.

On March 11, the Bombay High Court refused to grant an interim stay on setting up the Fact-Check Unit, noting that no grave and irreparable loss would be caused.

The single-judge bench noted that the petitioners fear that exchange of information in the form of political discourses or comments, political satire, and so on may be targeted if the Fact Check Unit is notified. However, the Solicitor General has said the unit only intends to deal with government business in its strict sense, and did not aim to muzzle political views, satire or sarcasm, it noted.

The petitions against the new IT Rules were referred to a single-judge bench after a division bench’s split verdict in January. While one of the judges on the division bench had struck down the rules, terming them unconstitutional, another had upheld them.

Last year, the Centre had assured the court that it would not notify the Fact Check Unit until a final verdict on IT rules. But after the split verdict, the Centre said the oral assurance could be extended only until the third judge took up the matter. The petitioners had then filed interim applications, seeking a pause on notifying the Fact Check Unit. After getting no relief from Bombay High Court, the petitioners approached the Supreme Court.



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