<p>New Delhi: The Editors Guild of India on Friday deplored the registration of a First Information Report (FIR) by the Kerala Police against a reporter of a television channel in connection with her coverage of a students' protest where shoes were hurled at a bus carrying Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan.</p>.<p>"While the Editors Guild does not condone any act of violence, it deplores in strongest words the police action against the reporter," the guild said in a statement here.</p>.Maoist injured in police encounter dies in Kerala.<p>The Kerala Police in Kuruppampady has charged the reporter, Vinitha V G of television channel '24 News', with criminal conspiracy under section 120B of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and issued her a notice to appear for interrogation.</p>.<p>The guild also demanded that the Kerala government desist from punishing the reporter for discharging her professional duty and instruct police to withdraw the charges against her.</p>.<p>"To cover protests is a media responsibility and is no crime. A reporter's presence at a protest site does not make him or her complicit in any untoward incident that may have occurred," the guild said.</p>
<p>New Delhi: The Editors Guild of India on Friday deplored the registration of a First Information Report (FIR) by the Kerala Police against a reporter of a television channel in connection with her coverage of a students' protest where shoes were hurled at a bus carrying Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan.</p>.<p>"While the Editors Guild does not condone any act of violence, it deplores in strongest words the police action against the reporter," the guild said in a statement here.</p>.Maoist injured in police encounter dies in Kerala.<p>The Kerala Police in Kuruppampady has charged the reporter, Vinitha V G of television channel '24 News', with criminal conspiracy under section 120B of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and issued her a notice to appear for interrogation.</p>.<p>The guild also demanded that the Kerala government desist from punishing the reporter for discharging her professional duty and instruct police to withdraw the charges against her.</p>.<p>"To cover protests is a media responsibility and is no crime. A reporter's presence at a protest site does not make him or her complicit in any untoward incident that may have occurred," the guild said.</p>