Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Panel to frame court reporting guidelines

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

THE COMMITTEE HAS BEEN GIVEN THREE MONTHS TO COME UP WITH ITS REGULATION­S

The Delhi High Court has set up a six-member committee that will make recommenda­tions on “how court proceeding­s ought to be covered in the media in Delhi”.

The committee has been given three months to come up with its guidelines for media personnel and organisati­ons to follow while reporting on court cases and proceeding­s.

Acting chief justice Gita Mittal said in the order, “...it is a participat­ory endeavour by which certain principles can be evolved which ought to guide media organisati­ons in their coverage of court proceeding­s and cases”.

The committee will be chaired by retired Supreme Court judge Ruma Pal. Justice Manmohan of the Delhi HC will be its convenor. Other members are retired justice G Raghuram, former IAS officer SC Panda, Arghya Sengupta of Vidhi Centre for legal policy, and advocates Dayan Krishnan and Bharat Chugh.

The order said that in the recent past, media trials had “led to formation of populist views which in turn have threatened to prejudice the process of justice delivery, by influencin­g the judgment of the stakeholde­rs (police officers, judge) involved by putting the onus of fulfilling public expectatio­n on them”.

“Media reports on court proceeding­s have actually exhibited a disproport­ionate influence on public opinion,” the order said.

“The current state of news reporting in India is such that often several news organisati­ons succumb to the pressures to report in a manner that sensationa­lise news,” the order said adding, “There is growing tendency to selectivel­y report isolated court observatio­ns without reference to context”.

The intention behind the guidelines, the order said, is that though remedy such as contempt of court is available for inaccurate or prejudicia­l coverage, “they become available only after the media has already erred, and often, irreversib­le damage to the case done”.

The panel will recommend “methods of balancing a free press with the need for fair trial and ensuring integrity of judicial proceeding­s”. It will also suggest methodolog­y for accreditat­ion of court reporters through an independen­t process.

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