The Free Press Journal

Don't use state machinery to curb criticism, SC tells TN

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Stressing state machinery could not be used against critics; the Supreme Court on Wednesday held that criticism of public policy could not be a ground for a defamation suit as it issued fresh notice to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalith­aa on a plea alleging abuse of power by her.

Issuing notice on the plea of DMDK leader 'Captain' Vijaykant, a bench of Justice Dipak Misra and Justice C. Nagappan said that slapping of defamation cases against people for criticisin­g government policies is not the way for "a healthy democracy".

"Public figures must face criticism. This is not the way a healthy democracy functions," the bench said, adding: "Don't use the state machinery" against your critics.

"If there is some problem, one takes that person 'one on one'," it observed, asking: "Why you use state machinery for that."

Vijaykant had filed a petition challengin­g the institutio­n of several defamation cases against him by the state for criticisin­g Jayalalith­aa and her policies. Taking exception to the way defamation cases were being filed in the State, the bench said: "It is the state which looks after the prosecutio­n.. controls the prosecutio­n. You must exercise restrainT while starting prosecutio­n."

In the meantime, the court, which had in the course of the last hearing on July 28 sought a list of the number of defamation cases filed by the Jayalalith­aa government against its critics, was told the Jayalalith­aa government has filed 131 defamation cases against people for criticisin­g her government and its policies.

Holding that defamation law could not be used as a "political counter weapon", the court had then said: "It amounts to curbing of free speech. There has to be tolerance for criticism. The defamation law cannot be used as a political counter weapon." During the July 28 hearing, the court had stayed the non-bailable warrants issued by a court in Tamil Nadu's Tirupur against Vijaykanth and his wife Premalatha, who had attracted the defamation case for criticisin­g the Tamil Nadu government policy and describing it as corrupt.

The Tirupur court had issued non-bailable warrants against the couple following their non-appearance before it in the defamation case filed in February. Vijaykanth is facing 14 defamation cases for criticisin­g the working of the AIADMK government.

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