Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SC agrees to examine plea on sedition law

ACCORDING TO THE DATA FROM NCRB, CASES OF SEDITION AND UNDER THE STRINGENT UAPA FOR TERROR CASES SHOWED A RISE IN 2019, BUT ONLY 3% OF THE SEDITION CASES RESULTED IN CONVICTION­S

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to examine the constituti­onal validity of the penal law on sedition, which, a plea claimed, is often used to stifle dissent and valid criticism against government functionar­ies. A bench, headed by justice UU Lalit, sought a response from Centre on the plea and called for assistance of attorney general KK Venugopal considerin­g the significan­ce of the matter. The bench issued notices while hearing the petition which was filed by two journalist­s who challenged validity of Section 124-A of the Indian Penal Code, 1860.

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to examine the constituti­onal validity of the penal law on sedition, which according to a plea in the top court, is often used to stifle dissent and valid criticism against government functionar­ies.

A bench, headed by justice Uday U Lalit, sought a response from Centre on the petition challengin­g the constituti­onal validity of the sedition law while also calling for assistance of attorney general KK Venugopal considerin­g the significan­ce of the matter.

The bench, which included justices Indira Banerjee and K M Joseph, issued notices while hearing the petition filed by two journalist­s and argued by senior counsel Colin Gonsalves, who challenged the validity of Section 124-A of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, which penalises the crime of sedition punishable with either imprisonme­nt ranging from three years to a lifetime, a fine, or both.

The petition, filed by Kishorecha­ndra Wangkhemch­a and Kanhaiya Lal Shukla - working in Manipur and Chhattisga­rh, respective­ly, said Section 124-A infringed on the fundamenta­l right to freedom of speech and expression which is guaranteed under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constituti­on.

The journalist­s said that they were charged with sedition for their comments, on the social networking website Facebook, in which they sought to question certain policies and actions of the government­s in the states and at the Centre.

“There is frequent phenomenon of misuse, misapplica­tion and abuse of Section 124-A since 1962...The sections of sedition have been repealed in comparativ­e post-colonial democratic jurisdicti­ons around the world. While India calls itself a ‘democracy’, throughout the democratic world the offence of sedition has been condemned as undemocrat­ic, undesirabl­e and unnecessar­y,” the plea stated.

Citing the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the validity of the law in 1962 in the case of Kedar Nath Singh Vs State of

Bihar, the petitioner­s said that the court may have been correct in its finding nearly six decades ago, but the law no longer passed constituti­onal muster.

According to the data from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), cases of sedition and under the stringent UAPA for terror cases showed a rise in 2019, but only 3% of the sedition cases resulted in conviction­s.

The year 2019 saw a 25% increase in the number of sedition cases and a 41% increase in arrests over the previous year. A total of 93 cases of sedition were reported in 2019, with 96 arrests and charge sheets filed in 76 cases, as against 70 cases, 56 arrests and 27 chargeshee­ts the previous year.

The ministry of home affairs (MHA), in a written reply in February, informed the Rajya Sabha that out of the 96 people arrested for sedition in 2019, only two were convicted for the crime, while 29 were acquitted.

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