Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Hate speech case against Hindutva body after SC ire

- Utkarsh Anand utkarsh.anand@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Delhi Police have registered a first informatio­n report (FIR) for alleged hate speeches delivered at the Hindu Yuva Vahini event in December, days after the Supreme Court pulled up the Capital’s police force for not applying its mind properly before rejecting the charges.

In the second affidavit filed on Saturday evening, the Delhi Police made a drastic reversal from its previous stand to state that an FIR has been registered on May 4 under charges relating to hate speech and promoting disharmony between communitie­s. The FIR was lodged at Okhla Industrial Area police station, said the affidavit, even as it did not disclose name of any person who has been made an accused in the FIR.

The first affidavit filed by the police last month said that investigat­ion of the video clips of the Hindi Yuva Vahini event did not disclose any hate words against Muslims and “nothing was said or done which could create an environmen­t of paranoia amongst any religion.”

On April 22, when a bench led by justice AM Khanwilkar took up the first affidavit of Delhi Police, it asked additional solicitor general (ASG) KM Nataraj, who was representi­ng Delhi Police, if the officer filing the affidavit understood the nuances and other aspects of taking such a stand before the highest court in the land.

“We hope this officer, being a senior officer, understand­s the nuances and other aspects of this affidavit? Is the officer accepting the contents of the (enquiry) report as correct or needs to have a relook at the entire matter?” the bench asked the ASG on April 22, prompting the law officer to concede that the department will file a “better” affidavit.

The bench was hearing a petition filed by journalist Qurban Ali and former Patna high court judge Anjana Prakash, drawing the top court’s attention to the spate of hate speeches at religious conclaves being held in various parts of the country.

The petition was filed in January after the two separate events were organised at Delhi and Haridwar.

The event in Haridwar, held from December 17 to 19, was organised by Yati Narsinghan­and, a religious leader who has been accused in the past of inciting violence with his incendiary speeches.

The proclamati­ons made by various religious leaders at the event, the petition maintained, were in breach of the guidelines issued by the Supreme Court in its judgments in 2018 and 2019 whereby states were obligated to appoint nodal officers to curb hate speeches and act immediatel­y against such offenders.

The court will hear the case next on May 9.

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