FrontLine

THE PLAGUE OF SEDITION

The Supreme Court of India has upheld the obsolete colonial law of sedition, which was inspired by the racist ideology of the need to keep Indian rebels under control.

- BY A.G. NOORANI

THE epidemic, rather the plague, of cases of sedition, which has swept all over the country has spared none: women, children, students in schools, headmistre­sses, you name them. Only the unborn have been spared. What is overlooked is that it is the Supreme Court’s gift to the nation. The Constituen­t Assembly dropped the very word sedition, which had found a place in the draft Constituti­on.

After the Constituti­on came into force, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru strongly denounced this archaic offence in Parliament. It was on its way out in Britain when our Supreme Court restored it, citing obsolete English cases and ignoring an earlier ruling of the court itself, which was contrary to the court’s approach. The Supreme Court is directly responsibl­e for the epidemic, constituti­onally and morally.

The matter came up before the Constituen­t Assembly on December 1, 1948. K. M. Munshi, a brilliant and erudite lawyer, moved an amendment for deleting the word “sedition” from the draft Constituti­on. He said: “Sir, the importance of this amendment is that it seeks to delete the word ‘sedition’. The object is to remove the word ‘sedition’ which is of doubtful and varying import and to introduce words which are now considered to be the gist of an offence against the state.…

“The word ‘sedition’ has been a word of varying meanings, and has created considerab­le doubt in the minds of not only the members of this House but of courts of law all over the world. Its definition has been very simple and given so far back as 1868. It says ‘Sedition embraces all those practices whether by word or deed or writing which are calculated to disturb the tranquilit­y of the state and lead ignorant persons to subvert the government’. But in practice it has had a curious fortune. A hundred and fifty years ago in England, holding a meeting or conducting a procession was considered sedition. Even holding an opinion which will bring ill-will towards government was considered sedition once. Our notorious Section 124-A of the Penal Code was sometimes construed so widely that I remember in a case of a criticism of a District Magistrate was urged to be covered by Section 124-A. But the public opinion has changed considerab­ly since and now that we have a democratic government, a line must be drawn

between criticism of government which should be welcome and incitement which would undermine the security or order on which civilised life is based, or which is calculated to overthrow the state. Therefore the word ‘sedition’ has been omitted.…

“This amendment therefore seeks to use words which properly answer to the implicatio­n of the word ‘Sedition’ as understood by the present generation in a democracy and therefore there is no substantia­l change; the equivocal word ‘sedition’ only sought to be deleted from the article. Otherwise an erroneous impression would be created that we want to perpetuate 124-A of the I.P.C. or its meaning which was considered good law in earlier days” (Constituen­t Assembly Debates, Volume 7, pages 731-2). The amendment was adopted unopposed.

On May 29, 1951, Nehru told Parliament: “Take again Section 124-A of the Indian Penal Code. Now so far as I am concerned that particular Section is highly objectiona­ble and obnoxious and it should have no place both for practical and historical reasons, if you like, in any body of laws that we might pass. The sooner we get rid of it the better. We might deal with that matter in other ways, in more limited ways, as every other country does but that particular thing should have no place, because all of us have had enough experience of it in a variety of ways and apart from the logic of the situation, our urges are against it” (Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Volume 16, Part I, page 200).

LANDMARK JUDGMENT

On May 16, 1950, less than four months after the Constituti­on came into force on January 26 that year, the Supreme Court delivered one of its finest judgments in Romesh Thapar vs The State of Madras (AIR 1950 S.C. 124). Romesh Thapar was editor, printer and publisher of the weekly Crossroads, printed and published in Bombay. The State of Madras banned its entry and circulatio­n in the State. The ban was quashed in a landmark judgment which is still relevant.

It noted the deletion of the word “sedition” and said: “The Constituti­on, in formulatin­g the varying criteria for permissibl­e legislatio­n imposing restrictio­ns on the fundamenta­l rights enumerated in Article 19(1), has placed in a distinct category those offences against public order which aim at underminin­g the security of the state or overthrowi­ng it, and made their prevention the sole justificat­ion for legislativ­e abridgemen­t of freedom of speech and expression, that is to say, nothing less than endangerin­g the foundation­s of the state or threatenin­g its overthrow could justify curtailmen­t of the rights to freedom of speech and expression, while the right of peaceable assembly [sub-clause (b)] and the right of associatio­n [sub-clause (c)] may be restricted under clauses (3) and (4) of article 19 in the interests of “public order”, which in those clauses includes the security of the State.”

KEDAR NATH CASE

But, on January 20, 1962, came Kedar Nath Singh vs State of Bihar, which continues to be cited as an authority that validates the offence of sedition as defined in Section 124-A of the Penal Code (AIR 1962; S.C. 955). Kedar Nath Singh’s speech did not err on the side of restraint. He said: “(a) Today the dogs of the C.I.D. [Criminal Investigat­ion Department] are loitering round Barauni. Many official dogs are sitting even in this meeting. The people of India drove out the Britishers from the country and elected these Congress goondas to the gaddi and seated them on it. Today these Congress goondas are sitting on the gaddi due to mistake of the people. When we drove out the Britishers, we shall strike and turn out these Congress goondas. These Congress goondas are banking upon the American dollars and imposing various kinds of taxes on the people today. The blood of our brothers—mazdoors and kisans—is being sucked. The capitalist­s and the zamindars of this country help these Congress goondas. These zamindars and capitalist­s will also have to be brought before the people’s court along with these Congress goondas.

“(b) On the strength of the organisati­on and unity of kisans and mazdoors the Forward Communist Party will expose the black deeds of the Congress goondas, who are

just like the Britishers. Only the colour of the body has changed. They have today establishe­d a rule of lathis and bullets in the country. The Britishers had to go away from this land. They had aeroplanes, guns, bombs and other weapons with them.

“(c) The Forward Communist Party does not believe in the doctrine of vote itself. The party had always been believing in revolution and does so even at present. We believe in that revolution which will come and in the flames of which the capitalist­s, zamindars and the Congress leaders of India, who have made it their profession to loot the country, will be reduced to ashes and on their ashes will be establishe­d a government of the poor and the downtrodde­n people of India.

“(d) It will be a mistake to expect anything from the Congress rulers. They (Congress rulers) have set up [Vinobha] Bhave in the midst of the people by causing him to wear a langoti in order to divert the people’s attention from their mistakes. Today Vinova is playing a drama on the stage of Indian politics. Confusion is being created among the people. I want to tell Vinova and advise his agents, ‘you should understand it that the people cannot be deceived by this yajna, illusion and fraud of Vinova’. I shall advise Vinova not to become a puppet in the hands of the Congressme­n. Those persons, who understand the yajna of Vinova, realise that Vinova is an agent of the Congress government.

(e) I tell you that this Congress government will do no good to you… (f) I want to tell the last word even to the Congress tyrants, ‘You play with the people and ruin them by entangling them in the mesh of bribery, blackmarke­ting and corruption. Today the children of the poor are hankering for food and you Congressme­n are assuming the attitude of Nawabs sitting on the chairs’…”

The Supreme Court said: “This species of offence against the state was not an invention of the British Government in India, but has been known in England for centuries. Every state, whatever its form of government, has to be armed with the power to punish those who, by their conduct, jeopardise the safety and stability of the state or disseminat­e such feelings of disloyalty as have the tendency to lead to the disruption of the state or to public disorder.”

It added: “Any written or spoken words, etc., which have implicit in them the idea of subverting government by violent means, which are compendiou­sly included in the term ‘revolution’, have been made penal by the section in question. But the section has taken care to indicate clearly that strong words used to express disapproba­tion of the measures of government with a view to their improvemen­t or alteration by lawful means would not come within the section. Similarly, comments, however strongly worded, expressing disapproba­tion of actions of the government, without exciting those feelings which generate the inclinatio­n to cause public disorder by acts of violence would not be penal. In other words, disloyalty to government establishe­d by law is not the same thing as commenting in strong terms upon the measures or acts of government, or its agencies, so as to ameliorate the condition of the people or to secure the cancellati­on or alteration of those acts or measures by lawful means, that is to say, without exciting those feelings of enmity and disloyalty which imply excitement to public disorder or the use of violence.”

It is an elaborate defence relying on old British law. A mere “tendency to create disorder” constitute­s sedition, contra the court’s ruling in Romesh Thapar’s case. Read this: “It is only when the words, written or spoken, etc. which have the pernicious tendency or intention of creating public disorder or disturbanc­e of law and order that the law steps in to prevent such activities in the interest of public order.”

In a classic work, Freedom of Speech, Eric Barendt, Professor of Media Law at University of London, noted (page 162): “A prominent American commentato­r on the First Amendment, Harry Kalven, observed that the existence of the offence of seditious libel—a hostile attack on government—is the hallmark of an unfree society.” (He was referring to Professor H. Kalven’s 1964 article in Supreme Court Review, page 1919.) He held: “The elements of common law crime in English law are far from clear. The obscurity made use of the charge dangerous when it was frequently brought, but now probably encourages its obsolescen­ce.… The classic definition of sedition reflects a traditiona­l, conservati­ve view of the correct relationsh­ip between state and society. Government­s and public institutio­ns are not to be regarded as responsibl­e to the people, but in some mystical way, as under the doctrine of the Divine Right of Kings, are entitled to the respect of their subjects.” Unlike our Supreme Court, he found sedition to be obnoxious.

INHERENTLY VAGUE

It is a fundamenta­l principle of criminal law that no man shall be put in peril on an ambiguity. Most authoritie­s have pointed out that the definition of the offence of sedition is inherently vague.

A theoretica­l plea for revolution is permissibl­e. There must be an incitement for immediate use of violence for such a plea to constitute an offence. In 1970 a unanimous judgment of the United States Supreme Court noted: “decisions have fashioned the principle that the constituti­onal guarantees of free speech and free press do not permit a state to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless ac

tion and is likely to incite or produce such (Brandenbur­g vs. Ohio; 395 U.S. 444 at 467).

In 1977, Britain’s Law Commission recommende­d the abolition of the law of sedition. In 1984, Lord Denning expressed the view that “the offence of seditious libel is now obsolete”. No one has cited Stephen on sedition as approvingl­y as Chief Justice Sinha did. The authoritat­ive work, Media Law: The Rights of Journalist­s and Broadcaste­rs by Geoffrey Robertson, QC, and Andrew Nicol, QC, opined that Stephen’s definition of seditious libel “is frightenin­gly broad and the crime has been used in the past to suppress radical political views. Even in the twentieth century it was used against an Indian nationalis­t and against Communist organisers. However, the postwar tendency has been to narrow the offence considerab­ly. There has been no prosecutio­n for sedition since 1947, and the offence now serves no purpose in the criminal law.”

OBSOLETE OFFENCES

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Sedition was abolished in the United Kingdom through the Coroners and Justice Act, 2009. The then Justice Minister, Claire Ward, said at the time of the Act’s enactment: “Sedition and seditious and defamatory libel are arcane offences from a bygone era when freedom of expression wasn’t seen as the right it is today. Freedom of speech is now seen as the touchstone of democracy, and the ability of individual­s to criticise the state is crucial to maintainin­g freedom.”

According to Claire Ward, “The existence of these obsolete offences in this country had been used by other countries as justificat­ion for the retention of similar laws which have been actively used to suppress political dissent and restrict press freedom.” Perhaps she had India in mind.

Robertson and Nicol point out that “many of the criminal laws that affect the media, official secrets and prevention of terrorism, and most of the laws relating to contempt, reporting restrictio­ns and obscenity cannot be invoked in the criminal courts by anyone except the Attorney-general or the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns (who works under the Attorney’s superinten­dence). In all these cases the Attorney-general is not bound to take legal action, even if the law has clearly been broken. He has a discretion—to prosecute or not to prosecute—depending on his view of the public interest. In exercising his discretion he is entitled to take into account any considerat­ion of public policy that bears on the issue— and the public policy in favour of free speech is important in deciding whether to launch official secrets or contempt or obscenity prosecutio­n. Actions that appear to compromise free speech are likely to be criticised in Parliament, where the Attorney must answer for both his and the DPI’S (Director of Public Prosecutio­n) prosecutio­n policy.”

Sir John Simon had said on December 1, 1925, in the House of Commons: ‘There is no greater nonsense talked about the Attorney-general’s duty than the suggestion that in all cases the Attorney-general ought to prosecute merely because he thinks there is what lawyers call ‘a case’. It is not true, and no one who has held that office supposes that it is.” In the Kedar Nath case in 1962, as well as in later cases, the Supreme Court overlooked this fundamenta­l difference between English law and Indian law.

FREEDOM TO GIVE OFFENCE

The truth is that while adopting British or American laws and institutio­ns, we denude them of their spirit and reject their culture. In 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court in a 5:4 decision upheld the right of one Gregory (“Joey”) Johnson to douse the American flag with kerosene and set it afire. The Texan, a member of the Revolution­ary Communist Youth Brigade, had torched the flag outside the 1984 Republican Convention in Dallas while chanting—in concord with a group of fellow protesters— “America, the red, white, and blue, we spit on you. You stand for plunder, you will go under.” After Johnson was arrested, and subsequent­ly convicted under a Texas flag desecratio­n law, his appeal ultimately reached the Supreme Court of the United States. In a dramatic ruling that surprised a good many observers, it upheld Johnson’s act as a valid symbolic gesture of freedom of expression, guaranteed by the terms of the First Amendment. With two of the court’s most conservati­ve members, Justices Scalia and Kennedy, moving over to the liberal trio of Justices Brennan, Marshall, and Blackmun, the court thus declared unconstitu­tional flag desecratio­n laws in 48 States and the federal government and set off a firestorm of protest. “If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment,” wrote Justice Brennan in delivering the majority opinion, “it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeab­le.”

On July 23, 1999, the Queen’s Barch Divisional Court

 ??  ?? KANHAIYA KUMAR, then the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union president, raising slogans at the JNU campus on March 3, 2016. The Delhi Police on January 14, 2019, filed its charge sheet against Kanhaiya Kumar and others in a sedition case lodged in 2016.
KANHAIYA KUMAR, then the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union president, raising slogans at the JNU campus on March 3, 2016. The Delhi Police on January 14, 2019, filed its charge sheet against Kanhaiya Kumar and others in a sedition case lodged in 2016.
 ??  ?? CHILDREN BEING INTERROGAT­ED on February 3 by plaincloth­es policemen at Shaheen School at Bidar in Karnataka, over a play allegedly against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act that had been staged at the school.
CHILDREN BEING INTERROGAT­ED on February 3 by plaincloth­es policemen at Shaheen School at Bidar in Karnataka, over a play allegedly against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act that had been staged at the school.
 ??  ?? K.M. MUNSHI, who, as member of the Constituen­t Assembly, moved an amendment for deleting the word “sedition” from the draft Constituti­on.
K.M. MUNSHI, who, as member of the Constituen­t Assembly, moved an amendment for deleting the word “sedition” from the draft Constituti­on.
 ??  ?? POLICE ESCORT three Kashmiri students facing sedition charges after being produced at a Hubli court on February 17. The trio, students of a private engineerin­g college, were arrested on February 15 for raising pro-pakistan slogans and posting the video on social media on the first anniversar­y of the terrorist attack in Pulwama.
POLICE ESCORT three Kashmiri students facing sedition charges after being produced at a Hubli court on February 17. The trio, students of a private engineerin­g college, were arrested on February 15 for raising pro-pakistan slogans and posting the video on social media on the first anniversar­y of the terrorist attack in Pulwama.

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