Hindustan Times (Noida)

Risk of prejudice if media fails to do its duty with care: Court

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A city court on Friday said the “presumptio­n of innocence” should not be destroyed at the threshold of the justice process through a media trial, while hearing a plea moved by former Jawaharlal Nehru University student Umar Khalid alleging a “vicious media campaign” against him in a Delhi riots case.

The court said it hoped that the media would follow “self regulation techniques” while reporting on a case pending investigat­ion or trial.

“Self regulation is the best mode of regulation,” chief metropolit­an magistrate Dinesh

Kumar said.

“...There exists a risk of prejudice being caused if the press and media fail to do their duty with care and caution. One of such risks is that of ‘media trial,’ the court said.

During another hearing in a riots case on Friday, another sessions court in the Capital asked the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e to respond to a plea by former suspended municipal councillor Tahir Hussain, alleging “trial by media” against him in a money-laundering case related to the violence in northeast Delhi last year.

The plea also sought rollback of the alleged defamatory content published against him in the media.

Meanwhile, another city court directed the superinten­dent of Tihar Jail to appear before it on a plea moved by JNU student and Pinjra Tod member Devangana Kalita seeking permission to send notes to her counsel, which she made from the charge sheet filed against her in a riots case, in a sealed cover from prison.

Additional sessions judge Amitabh Rawat issued a notice to the superinten­dent to appear along with the legal officer before the court on January 23.

The directions came after the jail authoritie­s submitted in the reply filed to the applicatio­n, that as per the Delhi prison rules, the concerned officials have to approve the notes before they are sent to her lawyers.

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