The Hindu (Visakhapatnam)

Poll time, prison time

Kejriwal’s continuing imprisonme­nt casts a shadow on election campaign

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The continued incarcerat­ion of Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal in the midst of a general election highlights the hard political realities that seem to determine which leader gets prosecuted or arrested on allegation­s of corruption. Over the decades, it has become clear that only an unfriendly regime usually pursues charges against key political rivals; and that the status of relations between the party that runs the government of the day and those facing such charges dictates the course of action for supposedly independen­t agencies. That the number of leaders whose o“ences are forgotten as soon as they join the ruling party or become an ally is increasing, while jail time is reserved for adversarie­s. In Mr. Kejriwal’s case, there is an astounding element of politics vitiating his arrest and prosecutio­n for allegedly taking kickbacks to formulate a liquor policy favourable to the industry. Mr. Kejriwal, who leads the Aam Aadmi Party, has been denied participat­ion in the campaign for the general election. The adverse implicatio­ns of his absence are quite obvious, even though there is no law that spares politician­s from criminal liability in election time. The Delhi excise policy case was registered in August 2022. The CBI and the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) have –led charge sheets, but the investigat­ion has been continuing piecemeal. Witnesses have been giving multiple statements, with each one containing newer material.

The power to arrest a suspect exists only to prevent suspects from …eeing justice, in…uencing or threatenin­g witnesses and tampering with evidence, or repeating a crime. There is a huge gulf between the power to arrest and the necessity to arrest. It is a disturbing reality that political leaders have been arrested in this case on the basis of statements made by approvers, and not any independen­t witnesses. The timing of the arrest has also become an issue of substance. That Mr. Kejriwal did not respond to multiple ED summonses may be cited as a reason for his being arrested now rather than months ago. However, this expectatio­n that the accused should “cooperate” with the investigat­ion agency is quite peculiar. Agencies ought to be able to prosecute people without their statements. It is known that Section 50 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act has been weaponised by the ED to record a statement that is admissible and then record the person’s arrest. Whether non-appearance in response to a summons is a ground for arrest and denial of bail is a question that has arisen in this case. Equally tenable is the question whether arresting serving Chief Ministers through central agencies and keeping them in prison throughout a multi-phase election does not amount to subversion of federalism and democracy.

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