Use this law more selectively
Misplaced enthusiasm after a cricket match is not sedition
India’s increasingly fragile national ego was hurt this week by a cricket match. Fifteen people, all Muslims, were arrested from Madhya Pradesh’s Burhanpur district and slapped with sedition for allegedly celebrating Pakistan’s victory in the final of the Champions Trophy. The police say their offence was shouting “proPakistan” slogans and bursting firecrackers on the roads. On how crackers or slogans could imperil the country, though, the authorities had no explanation. The episode underlined a mounting trend in India of using a sledgehammer to crack a nut – a British law to muzzle criticism of the state or government, with the focus often on who said it instead of what was said.
The sedition law has an ignominious history. The colonial provision has been used against activists, political opponents and even students. In most cases, the charges have been struck down by courts and legal experts have repeatedly stressed that even anti-India slogans didn’t amount to sedition. In this case, for example,the amountsubvert increasingly,Chargeshands to or theof any overthrowof familiestheirthey sedition seriousare arch-enemy.say wieldedare threatthe they usually governmentagainstas nevera But threat triggered celebratedeventhe throughto country.if deal theyby withacts India’sdid, violence. intendedpeopleit defeat doesn’t whoButto at don’tpride neighbours. themselvestoe the But officialby on booking nurturingline. This peoplea augurs thrivingfor seditionbadly democracy,foron account Indians, unlike of whoour slogans, a needless remarks ego made that on cannot television tolerateor cricket even matches,the slightestwe are hint baringof dissent, let alone criticism.The strength of India lies not in suppressing voices but in its long-standing tradition of multiculturalism and plurality that has held the country together even at the worst of times. The current amplification of nationalism that seeks to take on anyone who doesn’t agree is a threat to this tradition, and is not in keeping with our cultural and democratic ethos. The sedition law, and its repeated use, is the sharpest marker of this trend. This has no place in our democracy.