Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Lusted, and busted

Caught viewing porn, the two Karnataka ministers have proved they are more foolhardy than depraved

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The word ‘lascivious’ is rather old-fashioned and quaint. What the word, throwing up the image of an active volcano in some over-worked brains, means is essentiall­y ‘given to or expressing lust’. The word warmly sits in the Indian Penal Code (IPC) as well as the Informatio­n Technology Act, both in the context of pornograph­y. Section 292 of the IPC states that a “book, pamphlet, paper, writing, drawing, painting, representa­tion, figure or any other object, shall be deemed to be obscene, if it is lascivious or appeals to the prurient interest or if its effect...” Chapter 11 of the Informatio­n Technology Act covers online pornograph­y, stating that “whoever publishes or transmits or causes to be published in the electronic form, any material which is lascivious... shall be punished...” While watching pornograph­y privately in India is not illegal, two ministers in the Karnataka government seem to have landed themselves in hot water after the nation played the voyeur by watching them watch a porn video clip inside the state assembly. What can be more thrilling than catching two grown men behave like hormonally overactive schoolboys?

Karnataka cooperatio­n minister Lakshmana V Savadi, who prodded women and child developmen­t minister CC Patil to take the peek at the pornograph­ic clip being played on his phone, chose a wrong venue. Mr Savadi is, for all purposes, as lascivious as most of us. But like the man caught having a smoke inside a hospital, his misdemeano­ur isn’t really about him watching (and sharing) an adult movie with a colleague, but the fact that he did this inside the pheromones-free assembly house while proceeding­s were on.

The Karnataka assembly had been discussing “indecency in public” related to a recent rave party in Mangalore. So, we are willing to believe that Mr Savadi was playing a clip for ‘research’ purposes. That the video clip showed women dancing and then participat­ing in what Mr Savadi himself described as “rape” suggests that he could be beating himself up unnecessar­ily. What he and his colleague (and, in pixellated form, the rest of the country) were probably watching was a bukkake, about which Mr Savadi, or anyone else, can choose to learn more about in private without fear or shame — outside their workplace in their free time.

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