Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

SC STAYS ARREST OF THAROOR, SIX JOURNALIST­S

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday protected Congress MP Shashi Tharoor and journalist Rajdeep Sardesai from arrest in several cases registered against them for posting “misleading” tweets over the death of a young protestor during the tractor rally organised by farmers in the Capital on January 26 even as the solicitor-general of India sought to highlight the “horrendous” effect of their social media posts.

Apart from Tharoor and Sardesai, the top court also stayed arrest of five journalist­s -- Mrinal Pande, Zafar Agha, Vinod Jose, Paresh Nath and Anant Nath -and fixed the matter for a hearing after two weeks. It issued notices on their petitions for quashing the first informatio­n reports (FIRs) filed against them across five states.

An SC bench headed by Chief Justice of India (CJI) SA Bobde issued the interim order of protection after solicitor general Tushar Mehta, who appeared for Delhi Police and the Uttar Pradesh government, refrained from offering an assurance that Tharoor and the six journalist­s will not be arrested until the time the court hears the matter next. “This court may not be aware of the horrendous effect these twitter handles (of Tharoor and others) have. Most of them have followings in lakhs,” he submitted before the bench.

NEW DELHI : The Supreme Court on Tuesday protected Congress MP Shashi Tharoor and journalist Rajdeep Sardesai from arrest in several cases registered against them for posting “misleading” tweets over the death of a young protestor during the tractor rally organised by farmers in the Capital on January 26 even as the solicitor-general of India sought to highlight the “horrendous” effect of their social media posts.

Apart from Tharoor and Sardesai, the top court also stayed arrest of five journalist­s -- Mrinal Pande, Zafar Agha, Vinod Jose, Paresh Nath and Anant Nath -and fixed the matter for a hearing after two weeks. It issued notices on their petitions for quashing the first informatio­n reports (FIRs) filed against them across five states.

An SC bench headed by Chief Justice of India (CJI) SA Bobde issued the interim order of protection after solicitor general Tushar Mehta, who appeared for Delhi Police and the Uttar Pradesh government, refrained from offering an assurance that Tharoor and the six journalist­s will not be arrested until the time the court hears the matter next.

Instead, Mehta sought to emphasise the negative impact of the social media posts. “This court may not be aware of the horrendous effect these twitter handles (of Tharoor and others) have. Most of them have followings in lakhs,” he submitted before the bench, which also included justices AS Bopanna and V Ramasubram­anian.

The court was emphatic that either Mehta give an assurance that the petitioner­s would not be arrested or the court would have to issue a restrainin­g order against the police authoritie­s of Delhi, UP, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana and Karnataka, where as many as nine FIRs had been registered invoking charges of sedition and promoting enmity between communitie­s against the seven people.

The genesis of the cases against them were tweets in which Tharoor and Sardesai, a TV journalist, attributed the death of a protestor during the tractor rally in the capital to police firing. Tharoor later deleted the tweet after coming to know that the reported incident was false and the death was due to an accident involving the protestor who had rammed police barricades. In a broadcast, Sardesai later agreed he had jumped the gun. The Caravan magazine, with whom Vinod Jose, Paresh Nath and Anant Nath are associated, had suggested, based on an eyewitness testimony that Navreet Singh, the protestor, was likely shot by the police. Pande and Agha had also posted Tweets in the same vein , leading to the registrati­on of the FIRs against them.

On Tuesday, senior advocates Kapil Sibal, Mukul Rohatgi and Rebecca John appeared for Tharoor

and others, pointing out that the issue of multiple FIRs for the same cause of action had been settled by the apex court in a case involving another journalist, Arnab Goswami. Deciding Goswami’s case, the top court had clubbed all FIRs arising out of his statements on a TV show to one place and also granted him interim protection from arrest for a certain period.

“Nothing is going to happen in the meantime. What do you say Mr Mehta? Are you going to arrest them?” the CJI asked the S-G. Mehta replied: “I am not appearing for everyone (all the states)...”

“...We are protecting them from arrest for two weeks. Let all parties file their replies,” said the CJI, issuing the interim order.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India