India's market regulator on Friday barred the founders of news television channel New Delhi Television Ltd (NDTV) from the country's capital markets for the next two years.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India, which is looking into allegations of fraud over a multi-million-dollar loan secured by NDTV, also barred its founders, Prannoy and Radhika Roy, from holding any managerial position for the next two years.
"The loan agreements were unmistakably structured as a scheme to defraud the investors," the SEBI said in its order.
Federal authorities first launched an investigation into the founders of NDTV in 2017 and later brought a case against the couple -- seen as pioneers of private news channels in India -- in a move the company had said was an attempt to muzzle free speech.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has barred Prannoy Roy and his wife Radhika Roy from holding any directorship in #NDTV for a period of two years.https://t.co/r3parFgfAC
— The Hindu (@the_hindu) June 14, 2019
The same year India's federal investigating agency the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) raided the couple's New Delhi home as well as two holiday houses, prompting protests by Indian journalists, who described the raid as an attack on the freedom of press.
Don't make this a case of @narendramodi trampling on freedom of press @ndtv Let all Editors who argued this in the past look at @SEBI_India order and challenge it in court. Otherwise it will mean we journalists don't think laws apply to us #PrannoyRoy https://t.co/qZrK5v7pet
— Sunil Jain (@thesuniljain) June 15, 2019
NDTV had called the raids a witch-hunt. NDTV officials were not available for comment on the latest developments.
The CBI had said the investigation had no link to the editorial side of the NDTV, India's oldest English-language news channel.