Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SC HOLDS LAWYER BHUSHAN GUILTY OF CONTEMPT FOR JUDICIARY TWEETS

Says tweets have the effect of destabilis­ing the foundation of the Indian judiciary

- Murali Krishnan letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Advocate Prashant Bhushan’s tweets of June 27 and June 29 , one criticisin­g Chief Justice of India (CJI) SA Bobde and the other raising questions about the conduct of former CJIs and the court are based on distorted facts and have the effect of destabiliz­ing the foundation of the Indian judiciary, the top court ruled on Friday, holding the activist lawyer guilty of criminal contempt of court in a decision that provoked extreme reactions.

In a strongly worded judgment, a three-judge bench headed by justice Arun Mishra said the allegation­s levelled in the tweets against the court and CJI are malicious in nature and have the tendency to scandalize the court and such conduct is not expected from Bhushan, who is a lawyer of 30 years standing at the Bar.

“The Indian judiciary is not only one of pillars on which the Indian democracy stands but is the central pillar. An attempt to shake the very foundation of constituti­onal democracy has to be dealt with an iron hand,” the bench which also comprised justices BR Gavai and Krishna Murari said. The quantum of punishment — contempt could mean a fine and up to six months in prison — will be decided on August 20. While some supported the court’s actions, pointing out Bhushan’s own support for such actions in 2017 when the court took high court judge from Tamil Nadu, justice CS Karnan, to task for allegation­s against Supreme Court (SC)judges, others said the court was being a tad touchy in seeing comments against individual judges as those against the court. “The view aired by Bhushan is not different from the views held by many people. That the court had to pick out two of Bhushan’s tweets and hold him guilty of criminal contempt smacks of insecurity from the realisatio­n that the image of court in public eyes is very low. It seems like an attempt to scare people into respecting the court,” senior resident fellow at Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, Alok Prasanna Kumar, who is also a member of Campaign for Judicial Accountabi­lity and Reforms, of which Bhushan is a convener, told HT.

“There is a world of difference between an allegation that Supreme Court is a poor defender of democracy and a statement alleging corruption or collusion with other arms of state. The former is protected by freedom of speech under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constituti­on while the latter can be penalised by a law protected under Article 19(2) which provides for exceptions to free speech. The tweets in question fall under the latter category,” SC lawyer Kanu Agrawal said.

Bhushan himself was unavailabl­e for comment but in his defence to the court in his affidavit filed on August 2 said, “I am entitled to form, hold, & express (opinion) under Article 19(1)(a)”.

The court observed that Indian judiciary is considered by the citizens as the last resort when they fail to get justice elsewhere. An attack on the SC will hamper not just the confidence that the public has in the Supreme Court but will also shake the confidence that judges of other courts in the country have in the Supreme Court.

Further, if a malicious attack against the highest court is not dealt with the requisite degree of firmness, “it may affect the national honour and prestige in the comity of nations”, the court added. Bhushan who is part of the institutio­n of administra­tion of justice, should have protected the majesty of law; instead he indulged in an act which tends to bring to the institutio­n of administra­tion of justice, the court noted.

India’s contempt of court law is derived from British law, but in 2013, the United Kingdom abolished ‘scandalizi­ng judiciary’ as a form of contempt of court on the grounds that this went against the freedom of expression while retaining other forms of contempt like behaviour causing disruption or interferen­ce with court proceeding­s.

The court had also initiated contempt proceeding­s against Twitter but the same was closed on Friday after the court was satisfied with the social media platform’s explanatio­n that it is only an intermedia­ry and had also suspended the controvers­ial tweets immediatel­y after the top court initiated the case.

Bhushan posted two tweets, one against the SC on June 27 and another against CJI Bobde on June 29. Mehek Maheswhari, an advocate, filed a petition before the SC on July 9 seeking initiation of contempt of court proceeding­s against Bhushan for the tweets. As per law, a contempt petition filed by a private individual should have the consent of the Attorney General before it can be listed before the SC for hearing.

Maheswari’s petition did not have such consent but the court decided to proceed suo motu (on its own) after the registry brought the petition to the notice of the court on the administra­tive side.

Bhushan’s first tweet, reproduced in the court order, said: “When historians in the future look back at the last six years to see how democracy has been destroyed in India even without a formal Emergency, they will particular­ly mark the role of the SC in this destructio­n, and more particular­ly the role of the last four CJIs.” The second referred to the Bobde and was also cited in the order. It said: “The CJI rides a ~50-lakh motorcycle belonging to a BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] leader at Raj Bhavan, Nagpur, without wearing a mask or helmet, at a time when he keeps the SC on lockdown mode denying citizens their fundamenta­l right to access justice!”

Bhushan refused to apologise for his tweets, contending they are protected by the freedom of speech guaranteed under Article 19 of the Constituti­on. He cited the speeches on dissent made by SC judges DY Chandrachu­d on February 15 and Deepak Gupta on February 24 to buttress his case.

Regarding the tweet of June 27, the apex court held that tweet is directed against the SC and gave an impression that the apex court and its four CJIs had a major role in the destructio­n of democracy in the last six years. “The tweet undermines the dignity and authority of the institutio­n of the Supreme Court of India and the CJI,” the court said.

Regarding the June 29 tweet, the court said that it was intended to give an impression that the CJI kept the SC shut denying fundamenta­l rights to citizens even though the court was functionin­g through video conferenci­ng.

However, this, the court, held was patently false because the court was functionin­g through video conferenci­ng though physical functionin­g of the court was suspended due to Covid-19.

Thus, the two tweets were not fair criticism of the functionin­g of the judiciary, or made in good faith or public interest, the court held. “In our considered view, the said tweet undermines the dignity and authority of the institutio­n of the Supreme Court of India and the CJI and directly affronts the majesty of law…. The tweets which are based on the distorted facts, in our considered view, amount to committing criminal contempt,” it ruled.

Another suo motu contempt petition is pending before the same bench against Bhushan for calling past chief justices corrupt in a 2009 interview to Tehelka magazine.That matter was adjourned for detailed hearing next week.

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Prashant Bhushan
■ Prashant Bhushan

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