Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Berating the country cannot be treated as sedition: Law panel

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Berating the country or a particular aspect of it cannot be treated as “sedition” and the charge can only be invoked in cases where the intention is to overthrow the government with violence and illegal means, the Law Commission observed on Thursday in a consultati­on paper on the subject.

The Commission also noted that in order to study revision of section 124 A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) that deals with sedition, it should be taken into considerat­ion that the UK, which introduced the section in the IPC, abolished the sedition laws ten years ago. The UK did not want to be quoted as an example of using such “draconian” laws, it observed.

The paper also toyed with the idea of redefining sedition in a country like India, the largest democracy in the world, considerin­g that right to free speech and expression was an essential ingredient of democracy that has been ensured as a fundamenta­l right by the Constituti­on.

“Berating the country or a particular aspect of it, cannot and should not be treated as sedition. If the country is not open to positive criticism, there lies little difference between the pre- and post-independen­ce eras. Right to criticise one’s own history and the right to offend are rights protected under free speech,” the consultati­on paper said.

For merely expressing a thought that is not in consonance with the policy of the government

, a person should not be charged under the section, the paper said.

“Sedition charges can only be invoked where the intention behind any act is to overthrow the government with violence and illegal means,” it observed.

The paper also cited examples of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) student leader Kanhaiya Kumar, who was charged with sedition over the alleged anti-india slogans on the campus.

It added that while it was essential to protect national integrity, it should not be misused as a tool to curb free speech.

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