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The new meaning of sedition in India

Hardline Hindu brigade that screams treason at drop of a hat is mirror image of intoleranc­e in the country

- BY C.P. SURENDRAN | C.P. Surendran is a senior journalist based in India

Until last week, not much was known about 21-year-old Amulya Leona from Chikkamang­aluru, in Karnataka. Now she is a pin-up girl for secular India. On Friday, at a rally in Bengaluru, on a stage shared by fiery but cautious leaders like Asaduddin Owaisi, Leona took the mic and said Pakistan Zindabad (Long live Pakistan) twice. Owaisi and others intervened.

Leona seemed to have understood the implicatio­ns of her words — even if they were only two, the name of a country and a wish — and shouted Hindustan Zindabad as a balancing act perhaps.

By this time the mic had been snatched from her, but Leona gamely stuck on and added other countries like Afghanista­n and Bhutan to her list of benefactio­n. It was rather clear she liked to be on stage.

When she was taken away to a magistrate on charges of sedition, she seemed content that her plan worked and she held up her fingers in a V sign, which Winston Churchill, the prime minister of the country that wrote India’s sedition law, popularise­d in 1941 when the allies began their campaign in the Second World War: a very colonial gesture when you come right down to it.

Amulya has been sent to judicial custody for 14 days, the legal gestation period, it appears, before an aspirant could be crowned a revolution­ary.

Before the “zindabad” speech, Amulya was only a social activist. But she had been consistent­ly and with what can be only called an incendiary righteousn­ess that brooks no dissent, staging protests against the regressive and discrimina­tory Citizenshi­p Amendment Act.

Not the only one jailed on flimsy charges

But strictly speaking, if you wish a neighbouri­ng country a long life, is it sedition?

Despite India’s ongoing problems with Pakistan including border skirmishes and the well-founded accusation­s that Pakistan affords refuge to terrorists, there is no clear-cut announceme­nt from the Indian government that the beleaguere­d country has been officially designated an “Enemy Nation”.

Section 124A of Indian Penal Code says: “Whoever, by words, either spoken or written, or by signs, or by visible representa­tion, or otherwise, brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffecti­on towards, the Government establishe­d by law in India, shall be punished with imprisonme­nt for life...” The formulatio­n of this law was done in 1860 when the British were in power.

It would be self-defeating to apply to the Indian citizen provisions of this law to protect a government elected by him/her.

Leona is not the only one to have been sent to jail on flimsy charges of sedition in recent times. Notably, Sharjeel Imam, who was making speeches at Shaheen Bagh — an area in Delhi that has been an epicentre of antiCAA protests — and Kanhaiya Kumar a couple of years before that, among others, have been victims of the sedition virus. Why is the BJP so quick to suspect citizens of seditious activities? Indeed, is Amulya Leona worth the trouble? In earlier interviews, before she became the Joan of Arc of the week, she says she is a student of English and psychology and that she is an English and Kannada translator.

From her posts, her grasp of English does not justify the status of a translator that she has accorded herself. But that hardly matters in these days of selfempowe­rment: you are whatever you say you are on your Facebook profile.

Leona loves attention. In one interview, she says people like her are the leaders of the nation, and that the old people — presumably anyone over 30 — should move over. This is a very Greta Thunbergia­n principle at work: to take over the world virtually in your teens and rule. At the bottom of such selfdeific­ation is a desire for power and glory. At one very basic level, too, the politics of the kind of rant that Leona and a good number of liberals who support her practice do not entertain opposition. The patriots and bigots on the Hindutva brigade who scream treason and enforce section 124A at the drop of a hat are the mirror images of that intoleranc­e at the heart of India’s current divisive discourse. What the BJP is reacting to then is not sedition so much as the transformi­ng potential of free-speech. One way or the other, the Liberal has the same problem. What unites the proto-fascist — a growing tribe — with the ‘progressiv­e’ Indian is that the right to free speech, the one from which all other constituti­onal rights really flow, is defined so what they consider offensive is not articulate­d. And the fact is that there is no right to free speech without the right to offend.

Sooner or later India will have to find its centrist space if politics of schism, both on the right and the left, must cease. The Western media, are awash with articles and opinions that justly condemn the BJP’s anti-secular policies. It would be nice to see them commission­ing an opinion piece by Modi. Putin has done it. Boris Johnson has done it. I see no reason why Modi can’t be requested to do one. That would be a commitment made on the internatio­nal stage. It is not enough to accuse the right-wing government of India of divisive politics.

That is easy; it is a safe stone that is flung from afar. To make the Indian Right accountabl­e, you need to draw them into the internatio­nal debating stage, dominated by the Left. And here, either for want of imaginatio­n or the liberal fear that one would be affording a platform for the ‘wrong’ views, interphase is pre-empted.

So there, so here. In the Government vs Leona case, then, sedition is not the thing. At its heart, it is that old offensive thing, the free speech discourse.

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