{ In 1975 Emergency the Fundemental Rights were crushed openly . But now the ruling governments are mischeviously and in subtle ways is attacking fundamental rights . Harasment of Teesta Setalvad a staunch worker for communal harmoney and who did marvilious work on 2002 Gujrat Riots and Green peace workers who expose Carporate loot under the garb of laws is one of many examples of this method where they are blind to many socially demaging acts of their own tribe.
Present Government's submission to Supreme Court in support to retain IPC provisions of criminal defamation is such subtle way to favour supression of free speech . Read this editorial in The Hindu dated July 16 , 2015, blog editor}
A pernicious law
The Union government’s contention in the Supreme
Court that the provisions in the Indian Penal Code on criminal
defamation do not have a chilling effect on free speech will
disappoint proponents of fundamental freedoms. The zeal to retain a
law that the state can use to stifle criticism is at the heart of
the government’s position. It also goes against democratic opinion
in many jurisdictions that treats defamation essentially as a civil
wrong, and not something to be remedied by the use of the state’s
coercive police powers. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on
freedom of expression, the Human Rights Committee of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and other
international bodies have called upon states to abolish criminal
defamation, recognising that it intimidates citizens and dissuades
them from exposing wrongdoing. The grounds cited by the Centre now
to justify the continuance of Sections 499 and 500 of the IPC, which
deal with defamation and prescribe a maximum jail term of two years,
are specious: that in India, citizens are unlikely to have enough
liquidity to pay damages for civil defamation; that online
defamation in the Internet age can be effectively countered only by
making it a criminal offence, and that the law is part of the
state’s “compelling interest” to protect the dignity and
reputation of citizens. What it fails to see is that the main
feature of criminal defamation is its potential for harassment. It
is a tool that can be easily invoked and that enables allegedly
defamed persons to drag anyone to courts across the country.
Criminal defamation has a pernicious effect on society: for instance, the state uses it as a means to coerce the media and political opponents into adopting self-censorship and unwarranted self-restraint; groups or sections claiming to have been hurt or insulted, abuse the process by initiating multiple proceedings in different places; and, more importantly, the protracted process itself is a punishment. Further, magistrates tend to mechanically summon defendants without first assessing whether the allegedly offending content comes within one of the many exceptions to defamation found in the statute. Criminal defamation should not be allowed to be an instrument in the hands of the state, especially when the Code of Criminal Procedure gives public servants an unfair advantage by allowing the state’s prosecutors to stand in for them when they claim to have been defamed by the media or political opponents. Thanks to past verdicts of the Supreme Court, the government and its organs can no more file civil suits seeking damages for defamation, yet the pernicious law of criminal defamation is invoked to stifle free speech. Even as the court deliberates the matter, the government ought to reconsider its stand and come out against the criminal defamation law.
Criminal defamation has a pernicious effect on society: for instance, the state uses it as a means to coerce the media and political opponents into adopting self-censorship and unwarranted self-restraint; groups or sections claiming to have been hurt or insulted, abuse the process by initiating multiple proceedings in different places; and, more importantly, the protracted process itself is a punishment. Further, magistrates tend to mechanically summon defendants without first assessing whether the allegedly offending content comes within one of the many exceptions to defamation found in the statute. Criminal defamation should not be allowed to be an instrument in the hands of the state, especially when the Code of Criminal Procedure gives public servants an unfair advantage by allowing the state’s prosecutors to stand in for them when they claim to have been defamed by the media or political opponents. Thanks to past verdicts of the Supreme Court, the government and its organs can no more file civil suits seeking damages for defamation, yet the pernicious law of criminal defamation is invoked to stifle free speech. Even as the court deliberates the matter, the government ought to reconsider its stand and come out against the criminal defamation law.
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