Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Ex-judge urges SC to strike down law

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Supreme Court should strike down the colonial era sedition law so that citizens of India could breathe more freely, former Supreme Court judge Rohinton F Nariman said on Sunday.

The retired judge, who had in 2015 quashed Section 66A of the Informatio­n Technology Act in 2015 for having a “chilling effect” on the right to freedom of speech, also called Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act a “draconian legislatio­n” that requires to be scrutinise­d by the apex court. “I would exhort the Supreme Court to not send sedition law cases pending before it back to the Centre. Government­s will come and go (but) it is important for the court to use its power and strike down Section 124A and offensive portion of UAPA. Then citizens here would breathe more freely,” said the retired judge, speaking at an event organised by Viswanath Pasayat Memorial Committee.

NEW DELHI : The Supreme Court should strike down the colonialer­a sedition law so that citizens of India can breathe more freely, said former Supreme Court judge Rohinton F Nariman.

The retired judge, who in 2015 quashed Section 66A of the Informatio­n Technology Act in 2015 for having “chilling effect” on right to freedom of speech, also called the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act a “draconian legislatio­n” that requires to be scrutinise­d by the apex court.

“I would exhort the Supreme Court to not send sedition law cases pending before it back to the Centre. Government­s will come and go (but) it is important for the court to use its power and strike down Section 124A and offensive portion of UAPA. Then citizens here would breathe more freely,” said the retired judge, speaking at a function organised by Viswanath Pasayat Memorial Committee.

Justice Nariman was emphatic that the top court should not refer the clutch of petitions pending before it on the sedition law to the central government and that it should assert its power of judicial review to strike down the contentiou­s Section 124A (sedition) in the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The penal provision is punishable with a jail term ranging between three years and life term, with or without a fine.

Justice Nariman explained how UAPA came into the statute book after India’s wars with Pakistan and China. “We had China and Pakistan wars. Thereafter, we introduced the draconian legislatio­n, Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. UAPA is a draconian Act as it has no anticipato­ry bail and has minimum 5 years imprisonme­nt. This Act is not under scanner yet. This too has to be looked into along with the sedition law,” he said.

During his address, the former judge, who retired in August after seven-year tenure in the top court, narrated the history of the sedition law, pointing out that sedition was not there in the original draft of the IPC. “Sedition provision was there in draft but not in final book. But it was later discovered and redrafted. It was said that this section was left out by oversight. The wordings were also vague. Sentence under 124A was enormous as it was transporta­tion for life and imprisonme­nt for three years,” he said.

He then recounted how the British used the law against Indians including prominent freedom fighters. The judge also mentioned how freedom fighters such as Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru were convicted for sedition for speaking against the colonial government.

“Gandhiji said affection (towards government) cannot be measured by law. He said disaffecti­on should be given full hand unless it leads to violence. He said he considered it a privilege to be charged under Section 124A,” said justice Nariman, adding that Gandhi was sentenced to six years and he served two years behind bars while Jawaharlal Nehru too served jail terms in 1932 and 1934. He spoke at length about how Tilak was tried for sedition on more than one occasion, with Mohammad Ali Jinnah acting as Tilak’s defence counsel.

The former judge also described how sedition was initially part of the exception to free speech under draft Article 19 of the Constituti­on. It was debated extensivel­y before being dropped from the Constituti­on. But it, however, continued to remain in the Indian Penal Code.

“Then Supreme Court in Kedarnath Case (1962) ultimately said if we can read a particular provision in a particular way so long as disaffecti­on was coupled with call for violence, only then it would be sedition,” said the former judge.

He also pointed out that RSS-backed Organiser magazine had to undergo pre-censorship in 1950 by the Nehru administra­tion for speaking against the government. Sedition law and UAPA have a chilling effect on journalist­s, said justice Nariman.

On July 15, a Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice of India NV Ramana rued the “enormous power of misuse” of the sedition law in India and asked the Union government why it should not scrap a colonial law that was once used by the British government to oppress the freedom movements and leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi and Bal Gangadhar Tilak. The court observed that indiscrimi­nate use of Section 124A (sedition) in the Indian Penal Code is like a saw in the hands of a carpenter who cuts the entire forest instead of a tree.

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