Was your apology as big as your ads, SC asks Patanjali
Patanjali, Ramdev, and Balkrishna are facing contempt action from the Supreme Court for publishing objectionable and misleading advertisements about their Ayurvedic products
A Delhi court on Tuesday extended till May 7 the judicial custody of Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and BRS leader K. Kavitha in a money-laundering case linked to the alleged excise policy scam.
Special judge Kaveri Baweja of the Rouse Avenue Court passed the order for the extension of the judicial custody of the two politicians, who are in jail after being arrested by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) in March. The court had earlier rejected their interim and regular bail applications.
Kejriwal given insulin
The Tihar Jail administration on Tuesday said Mr. Kejriwal had been administered a “low dose” of insulin on Monday night following a spike in his blood sugar levels.
A day earlier, a court had directed the All India Institute of Medical Sciences to constitute a medical board to examine Mr. Kejriwal and decide on his demand for the administration of insulin.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked Patanjali Ayurved, a company co-founded by self-styled yoga guru Baba Ramdev, if its apology published in newspapers was as big and expensive as its usual “front page” advertisements for herbal drugs.
Patanjali and Ramdev and his associate Acharya Balkrishna are facing contempt action from the Supreme Court for publishing objectionable and misleading advertisements about their Ayurvedic products.
They had even violated an undertaking given to the Supreme Court in November last year to stop these advertisements. The court has so far been unhappy with their adavits expressing regret.
In the previous hearing, the three contemnors had promised to take steps to redeem themselves, indicating they would publicly apologise in the media.
Yoga guru Baba Ramdev arrives at the Supreme Court to attend the hearing on Tuesday.
Appearing before a Bench of Justices Hima Kohli and Ahsanuddin Amanullah, senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi, for the trio, said the apology was published in 67 newspapers. “Tens of lakhs” were spent to convey their regret for misleading the public.
“But is your apology the same size as the advertisements you normally issue in newspapers? Did it not cost you ‘tens of lakhs’ to put front-page advertisements,” Justice Kohli asked Mr. Rohatgi.
The Bench said it did not want to see “blownup” copies of the published apology.
Original version
“We want to see the newspaper in the original. Which page, where it was published, etc, We want to see,” Justice Amanullah told the senior lawyer.
The Bench gave Mr. Rohatgi time till April 30 to ¨le the original papers.
The court sought an explanation from the AYUSH Ministry for the sudden “omission” of Rule 170, which dealt with the power to take action against objectionable advertisements, from the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945.
The court said the government’s own expert body had recommended Rule 170, only for the Centre to inexplicably remove the regulation later on.
“Your own Minister of State assures in Parliament the need to protect consumers and initiate action against objectionable advertisements… then you go on to remove Rule 170. What weighed on you to do this?” Justice Kohli sought an explanation from the Centre.
Actually, the disarmament of Rule 170 was quoted by Patanjali as an excuse to continue with their advertisements. The company had found the remaining laws against objectionable advertisements — Drugs and Magic Remedies Act of 1954 — “archaic”.
The court further impleaded the licensing authorities and drug controllers under AYUSH.