"By delaying the establishment of a media inter-face in the Prime Minister's Office, in restricting access to ministers and bureaucrats in offices and in reducing the flow of information at home and abroad, the government in its early days seems to be on a path that runs counter to the norms of democratic discourse and accountability," the Guild said in a statement.
It said that every government is entitled to choose a media strategy that best suits its philosophy and interests.
"However, diminishing access to information to journalists and the media runs against the grain of democratic functioning in an age of openness, transparency and right to information," the Guild said.
Its statement highlighting "certain deficit in transparency in the functioning of the government" comes in the backdrop of a succession of press conferences by the new ministers to mark 100 days in office and the Prime Minister's interactions with the foreign media.
"While information always has ways of getting out, the public will be well served by such professional journalistic practices as identifying sources and getting elucidation and reactions from persons in office and outside.
The Guild, a professional body of editors, unreservedly welcomed the increasing use of social media by the new government to get its message across.
"But a top-down, one-way interaction in a country with limited internet connectivity and technological awareness cannot be the only answer for large masses of readers, viewers, surfers and listeners. Debate, dialogue and discussion are the essential ingredients of a democratic discourse," it said.
The Guild hopes that the ministers and officials would continue to be as forthcoming with the media as they did when marking the completion of 100 days in office and that the Prime Minister would interact with the Indian media as well on the lines of his interactions with the international media, the statement said.
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