Oslo (Norway): A video posted by Norwegian journalist Helle Lyng questioning Prime Minister Narendra Modi over media engagement during his state visit to Oslo has triggered an international diplomatic and social media storm. The confrontation has drawn a sharp rebuttal from India’s Ministry of External Affairs regarding allegations related to press freedom and human rights, while simultaneously resulting in the sudden suspension of the reporter’s primary social media accounts.
The controversy erupted during a joint press statement by Modi and Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre in Oslo. As the leaders exited the venue without taking questions, Lyng, a commentator with the Oslo-based newspaper Dagsavisen, was recorded calling out to Modi to ask why he would not take questions from the “world’s freest press.” Sharing the footage on platform X, Lyng highlighted global press freedom rankings, noting that Norway holds the top spot while India ranks 157th, asserting that it is a journalist’s duty to question cooperating powers. Following the viral spread of the video, Lyng announced that her Meta-owned Instagram and Facebook accounts were deactivated, a development she characterized as a small price to pay for press freedom.
The issue quickly escalated into a direct face-off during a subsequent MEA media briefing, where Lyng questioned Indian officials regarding transparency and human rights concerns. Rebutting the allegations, Sibi George, Secretary (West) in the MEA, delivered a robust defense of India’s democratic structure, explaining that the country represents one-sixth of the global population and operates under a constitution that explicitly guarantees fundamental rights with clear judicial remedies. George also criticized external narratives, arguing that critics often rely on selective reports from ignorant non-governmental organizations without understanding the vast scale, diversity, and internal vibrancy of India’s massive media ecosystem, which includes around 200 television channels in Delhi alone. In response to mounting internet scrutiny and allegations regarding her motives, Lyng issued a public clarification on X denying claims that she was acting as a foreign spy or proxy, maintaining that her confrontational questioning was merely standard journalistic practice to seek direct answers from figures in power.