The Free Press Journal

The judiciary versus the media

- Olav Albuquerqu­e The writer is a journalist-turned-advocate of the Bombay high court with a PhD in media law.

Soon after chastising the lawyers for raising their voices in his court room, Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra took it upon himself to berate the media for allegedly adding “defamatory” comments for their readers. His comments were provoked during the hearing of a petition filed by senior journalist­s against an order of the Gujarat court challengin­g notices issued to the Editors of “The Wire” who had nothing to do with an allegedly scurrilous article penned by a contributo­r.

In the USA, a landmark judgment called The New York Times versus Sullivan was delivered in 1966 when the US Supreme Court laid down that public figures could not succeed in defamation suits filed against newspapers without evidence that they deliberate­ly published false informatio­n against the plaintiffs. The right to debate the qualities of public figures could not be throttled by intimidati­ng newspapers with defamation suits, even though the informatio­n may have been false. This was because it was difficult to verify every single allegation before publicatio­n.

In India, our democracy lags behind by light years because an attempt to decriminal­ise the law of defamation was thrown out by the Indian Supreme Court. This petition was filed by Subramania­m Swamy, who is a saffron brigade leader and known for making wild allegation­s against Sonia Gandhi and her family. So, like “The Wire”, beware of what you publish. Few editors subscribe to the dictum of the late Russy Karanjia who founded the now defunct “Blitz.” He famously declared : “Publish and be Damned.”

The magazine, Outlook, under late Vinod Mehta, was at the receiving end of one such defamation suit when they alleged that former Union defence minister Sharad Pawar had links with hawala operators who were linked to gangster Dawood Ibrahim. One such hawala operator Mool Chand Chokshi alleged he had paid Rs 72 lakhs to Sharad Pawar. Gujarat Samachar, the 150-year-old Mumbai newspaper had telephonic­ally interviewe­d Dawood Ibrahim who allegedly told the journalist he “had good relations with Sharad Pawar.”

In his memoirs, the late Vinod Mehta, who was the then editor of Outlook, stated how Pawar filed a Rs 100 crore defamation suit which ended in an out-of-court settlement with Mehta agreeing to publish a symptomati­c apology that there were no documents to link Pawar with Dawood Ibrahim. The former editor of The Illustrate­d Weekly of India (now defunct), Pritish Nandy, now an MP, also published a front page apology after he splashed a cover story in The Weekly on the alleged sex escapades of former Orissa chief minister J B Pattnaik, who sent a team of policemen from Orissa to Mumbai to arrest Nandy.

The point here is that a free judiciary and a free media are both indispensa­ble in a democracy because the judiciary has to deliver justice by following the civil and criminal procedural codes while the media is not bound by these laws. As a result, influentia­l leaders may be accused of manipulati­ng the system because getting first hand evidence is impossible whereas the media can still investigat­e and pinpoint the culprits. But unlike the judiciary, it cannot punish them.

The judiciary and the media are often at loggerhead­s because the Constituti­on ignores the media, which enjoys press freedom because of the elastic judicial interpreta­tion of the right to freedom of speech guaranteed by Article 19 (1) (a). The judiciary is selected in secrecy and not elected like the executive and the legislatur­e which is given enormous power and privileges by the Constituti­on.

The judiciary is homogenous because all judges have basic LLB degrees whereas the media is heterogeno­us consisting of several thousand companies with different ideologies, languages and target audiences competing between themselves. On the other hand, the judges do not compete between themselves while delivering justice because the head of the judicial family is the CJI.

Every judge within India is guaranteed a basic salary of at least Rs 40,000 per month with government housing and other perks. Conversely, the media does not have the privilege to withhold its sources of informatio­n from the courts which is called a “shield law”. Such shield laws been enacted in advanced democracie­s like the USA, which grants its journalist­s tremendous freedom to investigat­e, expose even sexual escapades of its Presidents like Donald Trump and Bill Clinton and even force them to resign like the late Richard Nixon.

The Indian media is too cowed down to force any governor or prime minister to resign although the sexual romps of former governor N D Tiwari, whose illegitima­te son is a lawyer and former legal advisor to the UP government, was an open secret.

Rather than lecture to the media, the judiciary and the executive should leave it alone to do its job of exposing nefarious politician­s. The judiciary cannot expose corrupt politician­s but only punish them when there is evidence. But the media can name and shame them which is a sufficient deterrent for corrupt politician­s and power brokers. This is why the media needs to be given the rudimentar­y privilege to withhold its sources of informatio­n from the courts.

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