Kuwait Times

India’s top court suspends British era sedition law

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NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court on Wednesday suspended a colonial-era sedition law that activists say is often used by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to target free speech and dissent. Modi’s critics say that the law, which was once used by Britain to target independen­ce hero Mahatma Gandhi, has been abused by his government against many journalist­s, activists and students.

Section 124A of the Indian penal code gives widerangin­g powers to the police to arrest people, who can even face life imprisonme­nt, for an act or speech that “brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffecti­on towards the government”. “The rigours of Section 124A (are) not in tune with the current social milieu, and was intended for a time when this country was under the colonial regime,” India’s chief justice N.V Ramana, part of a three-judge bench hearing a petition against the law, said.

Ramana asked the government not to file any new sedition cases and pause ongoing sedition investigat­ions. “All pending trials, appeals and proceeding­s” under sedition, the court said, “be kept in abeyance” until the “re-examinatio­n of the provision is complete”.

The government had said Monday that it had decided to “re-examine and reconsider” the law but it remained in force. The top court also urged people jailed for sedition to approach local courts for bail. India’s official crime data says 236 people faced sedition charges between 2018 and 2020.

The law has long been misused by all Indian political parties in power but critics say Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has widened its scope, including to target minorities and ideologica­l dissenters. The government of India’s most populous state Uttar Pradesh, led by firebrand monk Yogi Adityanath from the BJP, has been an especially enthusiast­ic user of the law.

Police there last year jailed three students from Indian-administer­ed Kashmir for sedition after they celebrated India’s defeat to arch-rival Pakistan in a cricket match. India sparked global outrage last year after 22year-old climate change activist Disha Ravi was arrested for sedition for allegedly creating a “toolkit” to aid antigovern­ment farmer protests. —AFP

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