‘Invocation of Sedition Laws, UAPA Against CAA Protesters Illegal,’ Say Activists

‘We demand that the Union government stop this harassment, and Delhi Police immediately withdraw these charges.’

New Delhi: Activists under the banner of Hum Bharat Ke Log, a platform of more than 100 civil society organisations in the movement against the NPR, NRC and CAA, have issued a statement, strongly condemning the arrests and intimidation to which protesters are being subjected to.

Calling the Delhi Police’s charges under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act against former JNU scholar Umar Khalid and Jamia Millia Islamia students Meeran Haider and Safoora Zargar targeted moves by the Centre, the statement says the action is “inherently illegal.”

On April 21, Delhi Police booked Khalid, Haider and Zargar under the UAPA for allegedly hatching a conspiracy to incite the communal riots in February.

“We must remember that the protesters against NPR, NRC and CAA acted in accordance with their fundamental rights as conferred by the Constitution of India and hence the invocation of UAPA and the colonial Sedition laws are inherently illegal. This amounts to wrongful exercise of authority against lawful acts of citizens,” the statement says.

Also read: ‘Terrorism’ Charge a Lesson for Jamia Students that Democratic Protest Carries Heavy Cost

It has been signed by prominent activists and political participants, Anjali Bhardwaj, Avik Saha, Fahad Ahmad, Farah Naqvi, Ganesh Devy, Harsh Mander, Kamayani Swami, Kavita Krishnan, Kiran Vissa, Lara Jesani, Madhuri Krishnaswamy, Meera Sanghamithra, Nadeem Khan, Teesta Setalvad and Yogendra Yadav.

“It is clear that the government is trying to intimidate the leading anti-NPR/NRC/CAA protesters in an attempt to crush the movement, forgetting that India is the land of Gandhi where satyagraha is still alive,” the statement says.

It also highlights the circumstances under which such action is being taken.

“It is shocking to see that while the whole nation has come together to deal with the the health emergency caused by COVID-19 and the consequent nationwide lockdown, the government, instead of focusing on saving lives and livelihoods of citizens, is conspiring to crush peoples movements by incarcerating activists,” it notes, adding that this is reflective of a tendency to consolidate authoritarian power in the hands of a few.

The signatories also make three demands:

  1. The Delhi Police must clarify whether and on what grounds have these activists been charged under UAPA.”
  2. If so, such ridiculous and draconian charges, clearly meant to intimidate activists and quell dissent, be immediately removed,
  3. Those who were actually responsible for issuing communally charged statements, leading to violence and huge loss of human lives must be held accountable and punished as per law.

Asking the Union government to “stop the harassment,” the statement also asks media to deliver the truth on the matter.

“At a time of such grave abuse of state power, we call on every citizen and every political party to stand together to protect our democracy. We ask the media to stand for the truth. We demand that the Union government stop this harassment, and Delhi Police immediately withdraw these charges against peaceful and democratic dissenters,” it says.

Bihar Assembly Latest to Pass Unanimous Resolution Against NRC

The NPR exercise will be done strictly according to the 2010 format, the assembly decided.

Patna: The Bihar assembly on Tuesday passed a unanimous resolution categorically stating that there is no need of NRC in the state and that the National Population Register (NPR) exercise be done strictly according to the 2010 format.

The all-party resolution got the approval of the legislative assembly in the post-lunch session following a debate on the adjournment motion moved by leader of the opposition Tejashwi Yadav and others in the House.

Speaker Vijay Kumar Chaudhary read out the resolution in the presence of Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, his deputy Sushil Kumar Modi and opposition leaders among others to which all the members approved by thumping of desks.

Besides saying no to NRC, and conducting NPR strictly on 2010 pattern, the resolution stated that “transgenders” be included in the gender column of the NPR.

Earlier, while replying to a debate on the motion, Kumar had reiterated his opposition to “additional clauses” having been inserted into the NPR.

Also read: No NRC in Bihar, But NPR to Be Updated, CM Nitish Kumar Reiterates

He told the house that his government had written to the Centre on February 15 in this regard.

The official letter was send to the Registrar-cum-Census Commissioner by Principal Secretary of the state revenue and land reform department.

Kumar said though there is an alliance, the revenue and land reform department is headed by a minister hailing from the BJP.

Such matters cannot be decided if there was any disagreement, he added.

Kumar told the state assembly that there should be “no confusion” regarding how the NPR exercise would be carried out in the state and that nobody would be asked to furnish information like place and date of birth of one’s parents.

He said he himself does not know the date of birth of his mother, who died a few years ago.

How many people would be remembering the birthday of their mother and father, Kumar asked, adding during discussion many citizens say that their parents were born either before or after the massive 1934 earthquake in the state and regarding year many in the rural areas would mention either winter or summer season.

The concept of registration of birth was not much prevalent in the past as is now, he said.

A strong opponent of National Register for Citizens despite his alliance with the BJP, Kumar, however, disapproved of ‘hauva’ (bogey) of NRC being raised by the opposition despite Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s categorical statement that its countrywide implementation was not on the anvil.

He said that the CAA is a central act passed by Parliament which is currently pending with the Supreme Court.

Deputy Chief Minister Sushil Kumar Modi asserted that there is no confusion at all about NPR after the chief minister made it clear that the exercise in Bihar will be done on 2010 format.

He asserted that no documents would be sought from anyone during the NPR process.

Opposition should not confuse people on CAA, NRC and NPR, Modi added.

He has already said that the updating of the NPR will be carried out in the state from May 15-28.

Meanwhile, the principal opposition RJD, claimed the resolution was a result of the party’s struggle against the contentious issues.

Giving his reaction over the passage of the resolution, Tejashwi Yadav said, “We shook the BJP, right from Delhi to Patna, which was not ready to budge an inch over the issue of NRC/NPR. BJP just saw it happening…We will not allow the CAA to be implemented in Bihar.”

“It is the outcome of our continuous struggle right from Parliament to streets that NDA government has to yield. Bihar, where is in BJP power, became the first state to pass a resolution for not implementing the NPR,” he said.

His mother Rabri Devi also credited him for taking the issue strongly within as well outside the assembly with party workers which forced the state government to bring a resolution in this regard.

Ghulam Nabi Azad Thanks Modi for Implying Congress was Secular in 1947

While referring to a resolution of the Congress party, Modi had said, ‘I don’t think Congress was communal in 1947.’

New Delhi: In an effort to counter Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s rhetoric in his speech in parliament on Thursday, leader of opposition Ghulam Nabi Azad ‘thanked’ Narendra Modi for implying that Congress is a secular party. 

Azad said, “I want to thank the prime minister on behalf of my party that he spoke of Congress’ secularism, not from today but from 1947…and about our sensitivity towards our Hindu brothers in Pakistan.” 

While referring to a resolution of the Congress party in 1947, Modi had said:

“It [the resolution] says: “Congress is further bound to afford full protection to all those non-Muslims from Pakistan who have crossed the border and come to India or may do so to save their life and honour. I don’t think Congress was communal in 1947 and has turned secular suddenly. You could’ve written all communities coming from Pakistan. Why did you use the term ‘non-Muslims’?”

Soon after Modi ended his 80-minute speech, Azad tried to turn the prime minister’s ostensible attack into a compliment to the Congress.

Also read: Defending CAA, Did Modi Cite Same Nehru-Bordoloi Letter Which BJP Used to Slam Congress With?

“I thank the prime minister that he also spoke about (Lal Bahadur) Shashtri ji. But I also want to say, not just on behalf of our party but the other opposition parties as well, that we are not against granting citizenship to our Hindu brothers from Pakistan, Bangladesh or Afghanistan. We are in favour, in favour. This has been our policy since 1947 as prime minister Modi said. It has always been the case,” Azad said. 

He also explained the Congress’s opposition to the Citizenship Amendment Act enacted by the parliament.

“Our only opposition was that Nepal, Hindus from Sri Lanka and Bhutan should also have been covered by this law…And how can the government make a law according to religion?” Azad said. 

So far, BJP had been critical of the Congress’s opposition to the CAA. The party has said that Congress is opposed to granting refuge to persecuted Hindus in Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan. 

Notably, however, in his speech in parliament, Modi said that the Congress, led by Jawaharlal Nehru – Modi’s bête noire – had intended to grant citizenship to persecuted Hindus in Pakistan as far back as 1947. 

NIA Now Questions Cotton University Student Leader Pranjal Kalita

Kalita was questioned in the same case for which IIT Guwahati teacher Arupjyoti Saikia has been summoned repeatedly.

Guwahati: After IIT Guwahati faculty member and noted history scholar Arupjyoti Saikia was called by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) for questioning multiple times over his alleged involvement in anti-Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) protests, the agency on Thursday called in former Cotton University students’ union general secretary Pranjal Kalita.

Kalita is the assistant general secretary of Satra Mukti Sangram Samiti (SMSS), the student wing of the peasant body Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS), which was helmed by Akhil Gogoi.

Gogoi himself is behind bars for 2009 Maoist links case. The NIA took him in custody after his active involvement in anti-CAA protests.

Kalita was the general secretary of Cotton University students’ union during 2018-19. Kalita had received the summons from NIA on Wednesday to appear on Thursday.

Also read: After Questioning IIT Guwahati Teacher for 3 Days, NIA Summons Him Again on Feb 7

He was called under Section 160 of the Code of Criminal Procedure as a witness and in connection with the anti-CAA protests that rocked Guwahati in December. His legal counsel Santanu Borthakur said, “It cannot be said what he was questioned on. NIA hasn’t said anything and we don’t know when he will be called again. Once a case has been registered the investigation body has the power to summon people.”

Kalita was questioned for a few hours. Speaking to the media he said, “I was called over the same case involving Akhil Gogoi. The NIA, as of now, is not able to provide any evidence related to the case and people of Assam are a witness to that. They want us, the students’ community, as sacrificial bait. But won’t fall or be afraid. The revolution will continue and I request the people of Assam to not give up and take the agitation forward. I am not sure if I will be called again as the NIA hasn’t said anything about it.”

Besides Akhil Gogoi, other KMSS leaders like Dharjya Konwar, Bitu Sonowal and Mahesh Konwar have all been arrested by the NIA. Gogoi has been under arrest since December.

Defending CAA, Did Modi Cite Same Nehru-Bordoloi Letter Which BJP Used to Slam Congress With?

Modi said Nehru wrote to Assam’s first chief minister Gopinath Bordoloi in 1949, asking him to ‘absorb’ refugees. He then asked, “Was Nehru communal?”

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi today, February 6, tactically harnessed Jawaharlal Nehru – a man he has lost no love for – to hit back at the Congress and its opposition to the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).

Modi referred to a letter Nehru purportedly wrote to Assam’s first chief minister Gopinath Bordoloi in 1949, asking him to “absorb” refugees from East Pakistan on the argument that he would have to “differentiate” between Hindu refugees and Muslim migrants. 

“Was Nehru communal?” asked Modi, in typical style.

But this clever reference to Nehru’s letter to take on Congress for opposing the CAA is a sharp U-turn from where he and the Bharatiya Janata Party have recurrently posited Bordoloi vis-à-vis Nehru.

The letter that Modi referred to, is most probably the one brought to the public domain in 2006 by then BJP president of Assam, Siddhartha Bhattacharjee.

As per a report in The Telegraph then, Bhattacharjee claimed to have found the letter “among documents belonging to his father, late Gauri Shankar Bhattacharjee.” A Left leader of significant stature in the state, Gauri Shankar Bhattacharjee was considered as having been close to Bordoloi.

The news report had said that Nehru’s “alleged sympathy towards the refugees shines through in his letter…”

[He writes:] “Therefore, we have to absorb them and make provisions for them so that they might be good citizens. In doing this, all provinces have to help and co-operate and it will do no good to a province to refuse co-operation in national work.” 

Referring to a cabinet colleague of Bordoloi, who was firmly opposed to the idea of taking in migrants, [Nehru] adds and the newspaper quotes:

“I think he is wrong in this.” 

Speaking to reporters then, Bhattacharjee, now a powerful cabinet minister in the Sarbananda Sonowal government, had said, “The letter was a reflection of the pro-migrant stand of the Congress since the days of Nehru.”

That statement by the BJP chief was aired to put Congress in the dock in a state where the issue of undocumented migration has captivated socio-political life since Independence. The Congress has ruled the state for most since freedom.

Modi himself has attempted to give Assamese people the idea that he believes that Bordoloi has been short changed by the Congress. Addressing a rally in Guwahati in February 2014 in the run-up to the parliamentary elections, Modi – then the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate – invoked Bordoloi to present to voters an example that the Congress party allegedly never cared for the state.

As per Modi’s eponymous website, he had said:

“So immersed was the Congress in the worship of one family that they forgot the contribution of others in the freedom struggle”.   

In doing so, Modi was only following his party’s line in regard to Bordoloi. It was the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government that conferred on Bordoloi, a Congress leader, the Barat Ratna posthumously in 1990.

It is not difficult to find opinions in Assam that Bordoloi was left out of that honour by the central governments under Congress for taking on Nehru while Bordoloi’s contemporary – B.C. Roy – was bestowed the highest civilian award way back in 1961.

Also read: Decades of Discord: Assam Against Itself

Placing Nehru as the villain of Assam and its problems by often invoking the letter/s to Bordoloi, the BJP has also long maintained that it was him – and him alone – who ‘left’ Assam (and what is Arunachal Pradesh today) to the Chinese during the 1962 aggression.

It is not difficult to find BJP leaders – be it Sarbananda Sonowal (from Assam) or Kiren Rijiju (from Arunachal) – to refer to a line carefully plucked out of a long speech of Nehru – “My heart goes out to the people of Assam” – to emphasise that Nehru had sacrificed Assam then.

However, on February 6, while speaking at parliament, Modi tried using the uneasy Nehru-Bordoloi relations – documented through multiple letters they wrote to each other and repeatedly used by BJP to attack Congress – to support Nehru’s pro-refugee stand on Assam.

Importantly, he did it to lend credence to an Act that Assam has been vociferously opposing, in spite of his party picking votes 2014 onwards in the Brahmaputra Valley with the promise of protecting the region’s ‘jati, mati, bheti’ (in order words, on an anti-migrant stand).

The massive opposition to the CAA in the border state is – by the way – in line with Bordoloi’s guarded stand on refugee or migrant settlement.

A close reading of his letters with Nehru and his cabinet colleague Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel makes it clear that Bordoloi was against haphazard settlement of refugees and migrants from East Pakistan. He cited British colonial history of settling migrants from East Bengal in Assam, leading to conflict on the ground over issues of protecting the rights of the local community.

Also read: The World is Already Recognising Refugees from the ‘Hindu Rashtra’

Many Bengali Hindus in Assam, however, point out that Bordoloi’s statement in the state assembly soon after Independence – “Assam is for Assamese” – was non-inclusive of a set of people who migrated to British Assam after a large swathe of Sylhet went to East Pakistan during Partition.

By invoking Nehru’s words to Bordoloi in the Lok Sabha, Modi has, however, emphasised that be it the then central government, or now with his government bringing in an Act opposed by the people of Assam, the Centre’s stand on migration from East Pakistan or Bangladesh has remained unchanged. And that it may be forced upon people if the Centre so wishes.

Apart from letters with Nehru, Bordoloi also had epistolary run-ins with Patel, whom Modi celebrates, unlike Nehru.

In a letter to him on June 22, 1950, Bordoloi said that his government had already shouldered the responsibility of rehabilitating one lakh new refugees in addition to the 1.25 lakh who came one and a half years ago and some 10,000 of the earlier batch was already allotted land in the state. However, pressure from Nehru and Patel had continued on Bordoloi on the issue.

In a letter to Bordoloi on July 3, 1950, Patel said, “Priority should be given against local sentiment.”   

Modi’s mention of Nehru curiously did not invoke Patel’s letter/s to Bordoloi. Indeed, Nehru was not alone in pressurising Assam to allow for the settlement of refugees in the state after Partition.

An Unconstitutional Act, a Disappointing SC and a Misused Law: Justice A.P. Shah on India’s Ills

In a chat with Karan Thapar, the former Delhi HC chief justice speaks on the politics and legalities at play today.

Is the Citizenship Amendment Act unconstitutional? Are BJP MPs and ministers ignorant of the sedition law? And has the Supreme Court let us down?

These are three key issues that former Chief Justice of the Delhi high court and former chairman of the Law Commission, Justice A.P. Shah addresses in his special interview with Karan Thapar, for The Wire.

Below is the full text of the chat. Watch the video here.

Justice Shah, let’s start with the Citizenship Amendment Act. The preamble of the constitution has a firm commitment to secularism, and secondly the court has ruled that secularism is part of the basic structure of the constitution, so when the CAA discriminates against Muslims, is it breaching the constitution’s commitment to secularism and is it also breaching the basic structure of the constitution?

In my view, the CAA completely negates the ideals of secularism, equality and justice enshrined in the constitution. In 1973, in Keshavanand Bharti, the Supreme Court ruled that secularism is the basic structure of the constitution and it cannot be altered by the parliament.

There is a mistaken belief that the word secularism was added in the constitution in 1976 and therefore the constitution was not secular prior to 1976.  Our constitution is actually founded on the ideals of freedom of religion faith and belief, so secularism is the very basis of our constitution and this law which consciously excludes Muslims from the list of religions listed in the in the CAA clearly violates the basic structure.

Now on that particular point, the Prime Minister said this act illustrates India’s centuries-old culture of acceptance harmony, compassion and brotherhood. Do you agree?

I agree with the latter part of the prime minister’s statement that we have a centuries-old tradition of brotherhood and compassion. India always welcomed all religions from outside with open arms.

Also read: ‘There Is No Going Back’: Women Lead Shaheen Bagh-Style Protest in UP’s Deoband

Our constitution, our founding fathers, and the framers of the constitution did not use religion as a identifier for determining citizenship, it was consciously kept away from caste religion and language. So the basis of citizenship is shared identity. In fact, in my opinion, with great respect to the prime minister, I feel that the CAA is a betrayal of our rich traditions of compassion and brotherhood.

So, far from the fact that the CAA is part of our centuries-old tradition of harmony and compassion, it contradicts that tradition?

Yes, yes I agree with you.

It lets down the traditions…

It lets down India’s great traditions

Now, quite separately, home minister Amit Shah has said, I’m going to quote him, “Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist and Christian refugees from Pakistan have as much right over India as you and I they are the sons and daughters of India.” Does the constitution accept that these religions have a greater claim over India than Islam?

The home minister is not right, the constitution has not assigned the country to any particular religion. As I said, religion is not the determining factor of the of citizenship, therefore religion cannot be an identifier and for the first time, religion is being used as a condition for granting citizenship and therefore in my view, this this law cannot be justified on the ground that these persons of these particular religions are also sons and daughters of this soil.

All of them, all persons belonging to different religions, are also sons and daughters.

Can I put it like this: if Hindus Sikhs Buddhists and Christians from Pakistan are considered sons and daughters of India because they were all part of the same country before Partition then surely that logic applies to Muslims? They were also part of the country before Partition and Pakistani Muslims have as much right as Pakistani Hindus or Pakistani Christians?

Of course, if a Pakistani Muslim is persecuted by the Pakistani government for some reason, maybe because he’s Shia or Ahmadi or whatever, India should give him refuge and he should be entitled to the same benefit as that which is given to other religions.

Women with their children at the sit-in protest at Lucknow’s Clock Tower. Photo: PTI

This brings me to the second issue about the CAA. So far we’ve discussed and you’ve explained that you believe the Act contradicts and contravenes the constitutional commitment to secularism.

The second concern is, does it violate Article 14’s guarantee of equal treatment under the law and that of course depends on whether one considers these six religions from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan to constitute a reasonable classification or an arbitrary one. What’s your opinion?

Let me begin with this: a basic thing is that Article 14 is applicable to all persons. It’s not restricted to citizens and as you said, a classification is permitted under Article 14, so some people or subjects can be excluded, included, etc. but there are three important conditions in Article 14. One, that classification has to be reasonable, two, such classification has to be rational and it should have a nexus with the objective there.

So the objective has to be rational and lastly it has to be non-arbitrary. Now let us examine this particular law the government has chosen. How our legislature has chosen these three countries is beyond anybody’s comprehension.

Afghanistan was not a part of British India, so if you are looking at the selection of countries as a part of the old British-India, clearly is it’s not that. Then, if you are only looking at the religious states which persecute minorities then there are other countries like Sri Lanka or Myanmar. Sri Lanka is a Buddhist state and it has history of persecution of Tamils, so why are these neighbouring states excluded?

The next point is why these six religions? Muslims are excluded on a wrong presumption that Muslims are always persecutors and not persecuted so this completely erroneous belief is irrational because Ahmadia Muslims, Shia Muslims, Hazaras, are all persecuted by Pakistan and there can be persecution because a person is atheist or he’s a liberal.

For example, Taslima Nasreen, a Bengali writer, is a good example of persecution by the government not because she belongs to a minority but because she is a liberal.

So this is completely irrational, completely arbitrary.

There are two more things which you must note.  I do not understood this cutoff date December 31, 2014. Does it mean that these states stopped persecuting their minorities after after that date or we don’t care if they do?

North Eastern states like Assam, Mizoram, Meghalaya, etc., are excluded from CAA. Now take for example a Buddhist or a Hindu takes refuge, comes to this part of India, he will not be entitled to citizenship. So in my view, looking at it from any angle, the the law is completely irrational and arbitrary and is not reasonable either. So it’s violative of Article 14.

Also read: At Shaheen Bagh, Muslim Women Take Their Place as Heroes of the Movement

So, on multiple counts, it violates Article 14. BJP and government spokespersons, in trying to claim that it is a reasonable classification, say that the choice of the three countries, Pakistan, Bangladesh in Afghanistan, is because they’re neighbours. They claim that Afghanistan is a neighbour. If you believe that you have a claim to Azad Kashmir on that ground, they say all three are neighbours. Secondly, all three have a state-specific religion.

They claim that Sri Lanka doesn’t, they claim that Myanmar doesn’t, they may persecute their minorities but they don’t have a state specific religion so this is the ground for claiming these three countries are special and their ground for claiming that the six religions are special is that these are the only religions that are minorities in these three countries. If they were to present this argument in court do you think it could convince the Supreme Court that this is reasonable?

I cannot say as to whether it would convince the Supreme Court. What do you think? What I personally feel is that this law not only violates Article 14 but this law is incompatible with the vision of the framers of the constitution.

They envisioned a secular country this very deeply actually reflects the philosophy of Mr. Sarvarkar who believed that the that this country belongs to only only Hindus and the non-Hindus like Christians or Muslims whose religion originated outside India, they don’t belong to this country. So this is a philosophy which has, according to me, influenced this creation of this legislation. Remember that in the Constituent Assembly, 80% of the members were Hindus and they rejected this philosophy, that of assigning the country to any particular religion.

A protest rally by Mamata Banerjee against the CAA and NRC in Kolkata. Photo: PTI

So you’re saying that this Savarkar philosophy and its belief that India is a Hindu country is really the basis for this law?

Yes, government is pushing this agenda of this Hindu Rashtra. It is so blatant that you may say that this is one of the initial steps towards that goal of Hindu Rashtra.

So you’re saying even more important than the fact that the Act completely negates and contradicts Article 14 is the fact that it completely contradicts the constitution’s commitment to secularism and as you pointed out, it means it contradicts the basic structure of our constitution has laid down by the Supreme Court?

This is obviously so because this is the first time I’m seeing protests all over the length and breadth of the country. It is not only the Muslims, I mean there are many young people, there are the civil rights activists…everyone is rising against this law. Why? Because the people believe that this law is against the constitution which they feel is their duty to protect.

One more question about the CAA before I move to another subject and in a sense you hinted at it…The original Indian concept of citizenship is based on birth and parentage. As you pointed out, the CAA has now introduced citizenship on the basis of religious identity. In your eyes, is this damaging the original Indian concept of citizenship?

Originally, citizenship was based only on birth. Everybody born in this country was entitled to citizenship. This was amended in 1986 and again in 2003. Now, blood relation has to be proved, so one of the parents must be an Indian. So, that is reasonable, but this is the first time in 2019 or 2020 that a law has been introduced which links citizenship with religion and this linkage itself, according to me, violates the basic structure of the constitution.

And this would also deeply upset the constitution makers who consciously chose to create citizenship on the basis of birth, not on the basis of religious identity?

The basis was shared identity as Indian, and not a religion caste or language.

So this would really upset the constitution makers?

Of course, of course, of course.

Let’s come then, at this point, to sedition, a charge that is hurled regularly by BJP MPs and BJP ministers both at student protesters as well as Shaheen Bagh protesters. My first question is a very simple one. Am I right in saying that as far back as 1962 the Supreme Court and the Kedarnath Singh case read down Section 124, the sedition section, and now that section only applies if there is a clear incitement to violence?

See, the sedition law, which was introduced by the British in India was abused for convicting and sentencing freedom fighters including Gandhi and to record examples. And now our own government is using it against university students, civil rights activists and against anyone who is critical of the government. Now in Kedarnath, the court made it clear because this was to be tested on the anvils of Article 19 (1) a which offers right to free speech and expression, so the court said that unless the act has intent or has a tendency to incite violence or create disturbance in law and order, then alone such an act would amount to sedition.

So they restrictively read Section 124(a). According to me, these are peaceful protests where some people are reading the preamble of the constitution, some are raising flags and I mean Indian flags, and some are chanting ‘aazadi’. These protests cannot be termed as sedition certainly in the light of the law laid down in the Kedarnath Singh case.

Sharjeel Imam at Chanakyapuri in New Delhi on Wednesday, January 29, 2020. Photo: PTI

Can I go one step further? You’ve just accepted that in 1962 in the Kedarnath case the Supreme Court read down Section 124 (a) and it now only applies if there is incitement to violence. That was reiterated by the Supreme Court in 1995 in the Balwant Singh case, when the Supreme Court even said that shouting ‘Khalistan zindabad’ is not sedition.

Then, most importantly, just four years ago in 2016, the Supreme Court explicitly repeated this again and on that occasion the Supreme Court said and I’m quoting, “We are of the considered opinion that the authorities while dealing with offences under Section 124 (a) of the Indian Penal Code shall be guided by the principles laid down by the constitution bench in Kedarnath Singh vs State of Bihar”.

Doesn’t that mean that the Supreme Court has made it (at least on three occasions) clear that sedition is read down and therefore the law of sedition today is what the Supreme Court said it was in 1962, there can be no doubt about that?

Just let me give you the facts in Balwant Singh’s case. This was after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and two Sikh young persons shouted these slogans, ‘Khalistan Zindabad’ and ‘Raj Karega Khalsa’, in front of a movie theatre. Nobody responded and they went away. They were later arrested and and processed for sedition.

Now the Supreme Court said that there was nothing to show that the that their sloganeering had incited violence. If this intention was not shown, nor was there any response to it from anyone they said that the persons could not have been charged for sedition and this legal position, if this is the only interpretation of Section 124 (a) which really protects it from the eyes of above arbitrariness or unconstitutionality. So this reading in the light of Article 19 1 (a) is the only possible interpretation.

And this was repeated in 2016?

Yes.

And so, am I right in saying that there is no doubt, there is no question that the law on sedition has been laid down by the Supreme Court in 1962 and reiterated many times? There can be no doubt in anyone’s mind, sedition only applies if there is incitement to violence?

I know. It is very unfortunate that though the Supreme Court has made the position clear three times, not only this government but various governments misuse this provision 124 in prosecuting, I mean beside protesters, civil rights activists and any critics of the government.

So this is very important…the sedition law is repeatedly misused by governments and police forces.

Of course, of course.

Let me ask you two test questions. Doesn’t it therefore follow that peaceful, nonviolent chanting of aazadi is not sedition and Yogi Adityanath is completely wrong when he says it is sedition?

It seems that Mr. Yogi Adityanath is inventing his own law of sedition. This chanting aazadi cannot be sedition by any stretch of imagination, as peaceful protest against CAA is not sedition, so there the chief minister with all respect to him is completely wrong.

The second test question may be a bit more difficult, does it follow that Sharjeel Imam’s called for a peaceful, nonviolent blockade of the roads connecting Assam to the rest of India is sedition? Is the police right to charge him with sedition? Again because it’s peaceful and nonviolent. Does it fail the test?

It is difficult to answer this question for two reasons. One is the matter is sub-judice, secondly for I’m not really aware of the facts of the case but I’m taking the facts as stated by you.

So this boy gave a call that there should be peaceful protest and the road should be blocked….all roads to Assam should be blocked. Now I remind you that that Rasta Roko was used by many leaders, even non-political parties. Sharad Joshi, I just remember his name, used it as a weapon to get the demands of the farmers heard. It is an Indian tradition for peaceful protest.

I see two things. One is that he insisted that such protests should be peaceful and secondly nobody responded to his calls. Nothing happened on the ground, therefore there was no blockade. So if you take the totality of the case perhaps it may not be a case for sedition.

But then as you said the police regularly, repeatedly and not just at the Centre but even in the states keep charging people with sedition, when clearly what they’ve done is not sedition. A couple of days ago nine-year-old students in Karnataka were charged with sedition for acting in a play and this is clearly misuse of section 124(a). How do we stop it?

See, first we must understand the effect of this provision. It operates as some sort of an unauthorised self-censorship because it has a chilling effect on free speech. I can give one more example. There was a protest against a power project in Tamil Nadu.

So a complaint of sedition was filed against thousands of persons – unknown, unnamed persons. So a simple a peaceful protest against the power plant was also regarded as a as sedition.

JNUSU president Kanhaiya Kumar with Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya at JNU in New Delhi after the Patiala House Court on Friday granted six-month interim bail to JNU students Anirban and Umar. Like Kanhaya, the duo have been charged with sedition. Credit: PTI Photo by Vijay Verma

Now, the British brought this law to this country. In Britain, it was repealed. It was not used for a long time but the Law Minister’s speech at the time of repealing it is very interesting. He said that Britain is repealing this law consciously because it prevails in many other Commonwealth countries and it was noticed that those governments were misusing this law. So this was the reason why it was repealed!

This is very, very interesting. The British repealed the law, not because they were using it or misusing it. It actually hadn’t been used in England for many years, but they repeated it because they were aware that the law existed in Commonwealth countries and it was being misused there? So they hoped that if they repealed it then perhaps other countries would repeal it…

Let me ask you one more question. There was a shocking incident that we all saw on live television. A young man…fired a gun and injured a Jamia Millia student while shouting, “Yeh lo aazadi” many people say this is a direct consequence of what Anurag Thakur was encouraging rallies to say just three days earlier…do you accept that what happened on Thursday is a direct consequence, a direct incitement of what Anurag Thakur was involved in?

It appears to be so. The slogan was “Gaddaro ke saath kya karo?” to which the reply was, “Goli maaro.” So there was a clear incitement to shoot people and if this was a speech and if what I read in the newspaper today…his Facebook or his blog and what he said just before the occurrence, he said something like “Yeh lo aazadi” and fired at them.

So it seems to be a direct consequence of not only the speeches but this agenda. This policy of polarisation is ultimately leading to this situation. It’s causing great anguish that in a democracy there would be firing on peaceful protesters, on the students and the political leaders are inciting to attack the protesters.

In fact, you made a very important point, it’s not just Anurag Thakur’s speech in those slogans which he repeated many times that have incited this man, but it is also, one could say, speeches like Amit Shah’s where he said to people, “Press the button when you vote in Delhi so hard a current goes to Shaheen Bagh”. Or when Ravi Shankar Prasad says repeatedly that these are the “tukde tukde gang,” they are building up an atmosphere of vilification, of animosity against Shaheen Bagh and encouraging people or inciting people to take the sort of violent action.

When you say “this use the language,” I’m really taking exception to the vocabulary. I mean, you cannot a brand all protesters, all those who are critical of the government policies as anti-nationals. This is a trend today and this is what has finally led to this particular incident and i don’t know where it it is going to go hereafter.

Anurag Thakur. Photo: Facebook/official.anuragthakur

Let’s come back for a moment to Anurag Thakur. If, as you say, that what happened in Delhi on Thursday is a direct consequence of his incitement to violence, are there grounds for the police to act against Mr. Thakur?

Oh that’s for police to decide but the if you ask me I’m completely against this law of sedition, but who asked me? If there is an incitement that people should shoot all those anti-nationals or gaddars then this may amount to, this may fall in four corners of that section.

So this is very interesting. If there is a charge to be made of sedition it’s probably best weighed against Anurag Thakur, because he was inciting violence.

I had not seen even the video clip but I was rather surprised  that this was chanted many times at this particular election meeting.

One more thing. The Election Commission has barred Mr. Thakur from campaigning for three days but Mr. Thakur wasn’t simply indulging in hate speech as you said. Very possibly Mr. Thakur was himself inciting violence which is much worse and it’s produced, anyway, a shooting on Thursday. It might have produced much worse. Is a three day bar from campaigning sufficient?

Election Commission is a reluctant regulator. This is what I feel. The way first they were only removed from the list of the star campaigners, thereafter this action is taken…three days, I mean these are extremely provocative speeches which  completely violate the law laid down by the Supreme Court in a recent seven-judge judgment. The Election Commission is very slow in taking action against these.

I am not talking only about this particular incident. Even Election Commission is no longer an effective body which it used to be in at one time.

Let’s come at this point to the Supreme Court. How do you view the fact that the Supreme Court for five months delayed looking at the Article 370 cases. It’s not going to look at the CAA cases for at least another four weeks and as far as I can tell, it doesn’t seem to be at all bothered about the habeas corpus cases. What do you make of that?

This prioritisation is very disappointing. Lately, the Supreme Court is not really giving priority to the cases involving violation of civil rights or fundamental rights. I mean the habeas corpus cases particularly, which you mentioned.

Take for example Tarigamis’s case. A petition was moved by Mr. Sitaram Yechury challenging his detention. Now, Chief Justice Gogoi told Mr. Yechury that he is permitting him to go to Kashmir and meet him, but he should not indulge in any political activities and report back to them.

There was no prohibition against travelling to Kashmir but the Chief Justice said that they are “permitting” him. The case is not taken up and thereafter they said they decided they’re becoming infructuous or I am not sure whether it was sent back to Jammu and Kashmir.

I quote, but this is just one example. There’s a legal scholar, Mr. Gautam Bhatia, he recently wrote an article where he makes a very, very important point. He says that there is a drift of the Supreme Court from being a rights court, to an executive court.

The Supreme Court is speaking the language of the executive, it is becoming indistinguishable from the executive. He gives some example for sealed cover procedure and cites the [Assam] NRC conducted by the Supreme Court. But he is, of course, talking about the about the period of Chief Justice Gogoi, but this is a very serious criticism of the Supreme Court’s role as a protector of the fundamental rights.

So today, instead of protecting the fundamental rights of the Indian people, the Supreme Court behaves as if it’s protecting the rights of the executive. The power of the executive…that’s what you mean when you say the public support?

I would say I would quote Lord Denning that the Judge is becoming more executive-minded than executive.

So you are deeply disappointed by the way the Supreme Court is prioritising cases, failing to take up fundamental cases to do with civil rights and habeas corpus delay in taking up Article 370 cases. It still hasn’t bothered to take up CAA cases…this disturbs you.

I’m really disappointed but I feel that this criticism was mainly directed against the previous CJI Ranjan Gogoi. There’s a new chief justice and I hope and expect that the judges should be conscious about the about the criticism of many people of this court. About the court ceasing to be a rights court and they should really rise to this occasion and be more proactive.

Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi. Photo: PTI

You’re laying some hope on the new Chief Justice Bobde, but he is the one who has pushed back the CAA cases, they won’t be heard for another four weeks and we’ve just discussed that the CAA completely violates the constitution.

I wish that he had taken the CAA cases on some priority because the case was originally filed in December and then we are in almost end of January and the whole country is is polarised on this issue.

In fact the answer he gave us, that he will take up these cases after protests stopped…normally you take up the case to ensure the protesters get some sense of relief.

Good conduct cannot be a condition for access to the court. I don’t think that it would be right to say that unless the protest stops, the court would not take up the matter but I believe that this law is completely immoral and whatever view the Supreme Court might take, the struggle against this law must continue because with this law should not remain on the statute book of this country.

Let me for a moment focus on the Supreme Court ruling of January 10, on the restriction of internet in Jammu and Kashmir and the use of Section 144. After enunciating  what it believes is the law and after giving its opinion about the extent to which it can be restricted, the Supreme Court actually failed to reverse the government’s restrictions and it refused to give any verdict on the validity of what the government had done. What do you make of that?

See there is a Latin maxim it says ubi ius, ibi remedium. Wherever there is a right, there is a remedy. Now, the judgment reads like a magnificent Charter off of the civil rights and different types of rights. And it made some significant findings on the right to internet being of a fundamental right, etc.

But finally, it has not given any relief. It has not tested the validity of these orders. Not only that, after rejecting the government’s argument that the government has the right to keep these orders secret and confidential, the court did not ask the government to produce those orders.

It merely expressed anguish of a government’s action of not producing the orders. So there is no relief to the citizens and just imagine…I mean I read somewhere that to get Internet even for a few minutes people have to travel for hundreds of hundreds of kilometres and then find some cyber cafe and get internet for a few minutes.

I mean there’s a tremendous hardship cost to the people and I wish that the Supreme Court would have given some relief to them or have kept the petition pending. If it has sent back the matter to the review committee then there is a precedent which is called the continuous mandamus, which could have kept the petition pending and then after examining the subsequent events it could have passed appropriate orders one or one.

So would I be right in concluding from your answers that by failing to give relief, the Supreme Court’s ruling of January 10 is not just inadequate but it also doesn’t live up to its own grand laying down of the civil rights that I talked about earlier. It’s sort of self-contradictory.

I believe that this is an abdication of the duty as a protector of the constitution. The Supreme Court, right from the beginning, took a stance that it is the sentinel. The court is the sentinel vis-a-vis the fundamental rights and and today I’m sorry that it has really fallen short of performing its role fully and in true spirit.

Many people say that the Supreme Court today is showing the same pusillanimity, it showed in 1975. Would you agree?

That’s a criticism by many, but I still believe that this history will not be repeated. I hope that the original status as a civil rights protector would be restored.

Justice Sharad Arvind Bobde with President Ram Nath Kovind at Rashtrapati Bhavan. Photo: Twitter/@rashtrapatibhvn

All of us share that hope but let me put this to you, you’ve been Chief Justice of Delhi you’ve been chairman of the Law Commission, your entire career has been in law and a lot of it as a judge. How do you explain to yourself the fact that an institution that exists to protect the rights of the Indian people is failing to do so?

How to explain? It’s difficult…I can’t explain it but the I can only express my deep anguish and disappointment on the turn of events in the recent times.

You know people say that there is no institution in India that has more autonomy and more protection than the Supreme Court. It even appoints itself and there’s nothing the government can do to affect that tenure or the standing of judges. They’re completely protected and yet the judges seem to be – forgive the word – “cowardly”.

The Supreme Court of India is considered to be the world’s most powerful court. I mean, this is the only Court which has arrogated the power to itself to make the appointment, which has a power to strike down the constitutional amendments and  virtually giving legislative directions akin to legislative directions.

And yet with all this power, it seems to lack the spine or the strength to stand up for rights.

God will give them that strength.

If God doesn’t, what’s the future of our democracy?

This is the last resort, the last hope for the people. Therefore it is considered the sentinel. But if the sentinel fails, I don’t know what the future would be…

If the sentinel fails, the future looks dim, dark and weak.

Very dim and dark indeed

On that rather sorry note, Justice Shah, thank you very much for speaking to us.

Investigation Reveals Truth on ‘Sting’ Claiming Shaheen Bagh Women Were Paid Rs 500

Claims that the protests were sponsored by Congress run hollow in the light of an Alt News and Newslaundry probe.

On January 15, Bharatiya Janata Party social media head Amit Malviya tweeted a video of a group of men talking about the Shaheen Bagh protesters. They alleged that women participating in the sit-in protest are being paid to demonstrate against the Citizenship Amendment Act and the proposed National Register of Citizens.

A man in the video further claimed that the protest was “sponsored” by the Congress party.

Malviya reiterated the claim in his tweet.

Times Now broadcast the video tweeted by Malviya with the disclaimer that it “does not vouch for the authenticity of the video”.

In its broadcast, Times Now’s Megha Prasad said, “It looks like a sting operation, this particular video. It’s of course been shot with a hidden camera and it tries to show that people who are there at Shaheen Bagh are perhaps being paid for doing this sit-in dharna but again I am saying it is not for us to either corroborate or confirm any of this. We do not even know from where the BJP has got this video. Is it their own video, is it their own sting, have they sourced it from anyone?”.

Prasad continued, “Amit Malviya has not given the credit to anybody. So one is just assuming at this stage, perhaps, they have been able to manage something like this.”

Primetime debates on India Today and Republic TV also focused on Malviya’s video. Republic TV asked “Is Shaheen Bagh a paid protest?” and ran the hashtag #ProtestOnHire.

My Nation, a portal that has links to the BJP’s Rajya Sabha MP Rajeev Chandrashekar, published a report on the unverified video and asserted, “Now, you can also add that fact that they are being bribed to take part in the protests.”

OpIndia, another right-wing propaganda website, picked up the story too and said: “Even though OpIndia could not verify the authenticity of the video, it certainly raises doubts about the credibility of the organised Shaheen Bagh protests.”

Several other prominent Right-wing handles like BJP Gujarat MLA Harsh Sanghvi, BJP Mahila Morcha’s Priti Gandhi, former Shiv Sena member Ramesh Solanki, BJP Delhi IT cell head Punit Agarwal, and filmmaker Ashoke Pandit amplified the video with identical claims.

Location of the video

We watched the video frame-by-frame. In one frame, a mobile number printed on one of the posters on the wall is visible. The number is “9312484044”.

A Google search for this number revealed that it belongs to a shop named “Kusmi Telecom Center.” The image of the shop on Google Maps corroborates with details in the video: The wall is the same colour. The wall in the video also looks like it’s in a mobile shop, based on the data plan posters seen in the background.

‘The video was shot at my shop, claims are unreliable’

The “exposé” on the citizenship law protests was, in fact, shot eight kilometres away from Shaheen Bagh in South Delhi’s Pul Prahladpur. The area falls under the Tughlakabad constituency. The video was made at shop number 134, called Kusmi Telecom, located at F-block in Mittal colony — just a few minutes’ walk from the Tughlakabad metro station.

The Tughlakabad urban area sits on the hillocks of South Delhi, so its streets slope randomly. The main commercial street in Mittal Colony’s F-block ends at an uphill intersection. Kusmi Telecom is located at this junction.

Ashwani Kumar, 38, runs the shop with his sectagenarian father. He sells data plans, print-outs, chips, eggs and cigarettes. The shop, with big red advertisements for Airtel and Vodafone, does not stretch beyond 8-10 square feet. Its walls are painted teal, and a wall-clock featuring BJP leaders, prominently Narendra Modi, faces the customer.

Kumar and his father vehemently denied that the video was shot in their shop — until four days later when he admitted it had been. While he denied shooting it himself, too many things don’t add up.

Easing Kumar into conversation, we discussed election issues.

“To be honest, the leaders do not care much about the elders and the widows here, be it MLA or MP,” Kumar said. “All of them come once every five years, asking for votes. I take people to their leaders and get their work done. I work for the people.”

Kumar’s father, with thick-rimmed glasses and a winter cap, agreed.

Ashwani Kumar likes to call himself a “karyakarta”, or a worker. Given the BJP paraphernalia in his shop, can he be described as a “BJP worker”? “Only ‘worker’ will do,” he grinned, “although I’ve belonged to the BJP since the beginning.”

Several stacks of documents lay on the shelves of his shop — paperwork of people that Kumar helps. He took them out and put them on the table.“Look, this person did not get their pension,” he pointed to a piece of paper. Kumar said both the AAP MLA and BJP MP are approachable representatives. When you go to them with problems, as Kumar does, “they treat you well and listen to you”.

Discussing the CAA and the NRC, both father and son support it. “I don’t understand why there’s so much protest about it,” said the father. The son added: “If the government had made a law, it must be right. Those people are educated. They must be thinking about the country.”

And what about the people who are protesting against the law? “There are all kinds of people. There was firing at Jamia today, for instance,” Kumar said, his implication being it was a protester who fired — which is untrue. “The Muslims living here [Mittal Colony] are also fine. They are peace-loving.”

His father interjected: “There are 125 crore people, who knows what kind of people are getting into this country?”

When I brought up the “exposé” on Shaheen Bagh — that the protest is “sponsored” and women were being paid to protest — Kumar said, “It is wrong to say such things about people. It is all hearsay, and people just like to spread it further. It can also be a lie.”

From the first 20 minutes of conversation, certain things are clear.

First, the “exposé” spread by the BJP was shot at this shop. The visuals in the video gel perfectly with the interiors: the walls, the eggs, the numbers, etc.

Second, there were three voices in that video: the accuser, visible on camera, and two others, who couldn’t be seen. To my mind, one of the voices sounds exactly like Kumar’s father — it’s distinctly hoarse and crusty. In fact, it sounds like it’s Kumar’s father who says “sab Congress ka khel hai” in the video. This was later quoted in Amit Malviya’s tweet and repeated on Times Now.

Similarly, Kumar’s voice, with its accent and flair, fits with the voice in the video that emanates from directly behind the camera.

Third, the video is clearly shot on a phone, not a sting camera. Its original frame (see here) is a typical phone-sized frame that was shrunk when Malviya shared it online.

Adding these up, could it be that Ashwani Kumar shot the video himself?

When asked if the video was shot in his shop, Kumar got antsy and denied it vehemently. “Two people can go to any shop, talk nonsense, shoot a video and make it viral. It is not a difficult thing to do.”

So was that video shot at your shop? “No,” he asserted.

The conversation might have looped from election issues to Shaheen Bagh, but Kumar was now fully aware that we’re investigating the BJP video. He turned defensive, claiming he has no affiliation to any political party. He began cursing and grabbed my notebook, striking off the bit where I had written “BJP karyakarta” under his name. He then ripped out the pages with my notes.

As I smoked a cigarette that I’d bought from his own store, Kumar even shot a video of me (Newslaundry reporter), saying, “Look, this man is smoking at my shop without my permission.”

He then said: “Wherever that video might have been shot, you should know one thing. That boy in it did not know anything. He was a kid. He couldn’t tell his elbow from his ass. And by the way, I have nothing to do with the BJP, the AAP or the Congress.” The “boy” refers to the person in the “sting” video who says Shaheen Bagh’s women are being paid to protest.

Till the last minute of our meeting, Kumar remained incensed and refused to concede that the video was shot at his shop. Finally, four days later, he told me over the phone: “The video was indeed shot at my shop,” he said, “but it was another person who shot it covertly from outside. And what was said in it is unreliable.”

It is hard to believe Ashwani’s caveat — that the video was shot from outside the shop by an outsider. In the video, the accuser, who is standing outside and across the desk, looks inside while addressing the comments of the person behind the camera.

Additionally, at 1:24 in the video, the camera zooms out and it becomes clear that the person shooting the video is inside the shop. A person standing outside would have to stretch his hands all the way to the inside to shoot that frame. Such gymnastics would hardly go unnoticed, and would be far from being “covert”, which Kumar claimed it was. When I posed this to him, he said his father might not have noticed it because he is an “elder”.

‘There is no proof, it is common sense’

About 50 metres away from Ashwani Kumar’s shop, the neighbourhood was decorated with BJP flags. A particularly large party flag was hoisted on the terrace of one of the houses.

This is the home of Bhanwar Singh Rana, a local BJP worker in Pul Prahladpur. A stout man with a ready smile, Rana believes that women in Shaheen Bagh are being paid to protest. He cannot prove it, he claimed, but it is “common sense”. “If the protest is honest, why are they making women sit on the road?”

Nearing the end of an hour-long conversation on politics, the BJP, news and newsmakers, Rana said he likes Republic Bharat.

Isn’t that the channel that did the Shaheen Bagh sting on women, I asked him, deliberately and incorrectly. He smiled, turned to an acolyte seated beside him, and asked mischievously: “Do you know who did that sting?”

Rana answered the question himself: “He is from our street only. There is a shop in our neighbourhood. One boy stood there and talked, and someone made a video of him.”

When I asked Rana to introduce this shop owner to me (Newslaundry reporter), he said he couldn’t. “That person has told me not to reveal his identity. I don’t know who the boy is, but I know the shopwalla. He’s close to me.”

Rana gave me Kumar’s answer when I probed further. “A person who was standing outside the shop made the video, not the shop owner,” he claimed. “You keep that video with yourself. You come to me after February 8, after the elections, and I’ll introduce you to the shop owner,” he grinned.

The exposé that wasn’t

This AltNews-Newslaundry investigation would have been unnecessary if the news outlets that carried this “sting” as news — and even conducted primetime debates on it — had done their own investigation in the matter.

Here’s basically what happened: three people in a corner of Delhi made unproven claims about a protest eight kilometres away, one of them filmed it, the governing party spread it on social media, and channels like Times Now, Republic and India Today debated it on national television. These tall claims — from which the shopkeeper distanced himself, and which the BJP couldn’t back with evidence — might have attracted eyeballs and generated advertising revenue, but they also lent credence to baseless, unverified claims.

These became a part of an online misinformation campaign to portray the women at Shaheen Bagh as paid protesters. A morphed image and an old video were used for this. These representations came handy in the political domain, like when Home Minister Amit Shah remarked that Delhi voters should “press the voting button so hard that the current is felt in Shaheen Bagh”, or when a BJP minister made a crowd chant, “Desh ke gaddaron ko, goli maaro saalon ko”, effectively endangering the lives of adults and children at the Shaheen Bagh protest.

We reached out to Amit Malviya for his comments. This story will be updated if and when he responds.

Alt News and Newslaundry are independent platforms that focus on misinformation and propaganda in the mainstream media. You can support AltNews and subscribe to Newslaundry.

This story has been republished from Alt News. Read the original here.

After Questioning IIT Guwahati Teacher for 3 Days, NIA Summons Him Again on Feb 7

Arupjyoti Saikia’s counsel told The Wire that the move reeked of intimidation.

Guwahati: IIT Guwahati faculty member Arupjyoti Saikia has been called for another round of questioning by the National Investigation Agency on February 7.

Saikia was questioned on Tuesday, February 4, for about five hours. This was the third time since Saturday that he was summoned by the investigation body for his alleged links with peasant group Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) and Maoist groups.

Saikia’s legal counsel Santanu Borthakur told The Wire that he was summoned at the NIA office at Sonapur in the outskirts of the city at around 11:30 am and was let go in the evening.

Borthakur said that no specific details could be shared so as to what exactly transpired between Saikia and NIA during the questioning. He however added that the continued questioning of the noted scholar was uncalled for and unheard of as he was being called as a witness and not as an ‘accused.’

Also read: NIA Questions IIT Guwahati Professor Involved in Anti-CAA Protests

Borthakur also said that it looked like a form of intimidation.

Saikia was summoned by the NIA under Section 160 of the Criminal Procedure Code Police (CrPc). This section has the power to summon a witness or require his or her attendance. The case related to Saikia pertains to his alleged involvement in the anti-CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019) protests that rocked Guwahati and other parts of Assam in December.

“It is difficult to say why the NIA is acting like this. Generally, they behave this way only when there is intimidation,” said Borthakur.

State finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma some days ago in a press conference said that the state had information on instruction given to burn down the state legislative assembly or the Janata Bhawan in Dispur. “The instruction was given by a leading academic of Assam. I won’t give out the name but if one studies or reads the police case or case records against peasant leader Akhil Gogoi it reeks of the involvement of a leading academic but not known intellectual who works with a central government organisation or an academic institute,” Sarma had said.

‘Rape as Campaign Message’: Citizens Write Open Letter to PM on BJP’s Rhetoric Against Protesters

‘We have long suffered violence on our bodies, with little access to justice, despite your government’s slogan of ‘Beti Bachao’!’

New Delhi: As many as 175 organisations, women and men – from across various fields of profession and activism – have written an open letter urging Prime Minister Narendra Modi to take note of his constitutional duty to protect all citizens, especially in the light of the charged rhetoric that BJP leaders have been employing against anti-Citizenship Amendment Act protesters.

Drawing attention to the fact that most of the protesters are women and that Modi’s party has gone about campaigning for the Delhi assembly election with speeches that call for violence on said women protesters, the signatories requested the prime minister for his intervention.

Elections, they said, must be fought in a manner that upholds the constitution.

Prominent among the individual signatories are economist Devaki Jain, DASTKAR chairperson Laila Tyabji, former diplomats Madhu Bhaduri and Navrekha Sharma, historian and filmmaker Uma Chakravarti and former member of the National Commission for Minorities, Zoya Hasan.

Also read: We Are Seeing, for the First Time, a Sustained Countrywide Movement Led by Women

Organisations that work for women’s rights, like Saheli, Pinjra Tod, Women against Sexual Violence and State Repression, Mahila Kisan Adhikar Manch, Muslim Women’s Forum, etc. also signed the open letter.

The full text of the letter is produced below.

§

Dear Mr Prime Minister,

We speak to you as women of this country, and the women of Delhi – Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Sikh, Adivasi and Dalit – who are horrified at the atmosphere of violence against women that members of your party have created merely to try and win an election.

– When Mr Anurag Thakur, a sitting minister in the Central government exhorts a crowd to yell ‘Goli maaron saalon ko’, please remember that in this case the ‘saalon’ is lakhs of peacefully protesting women, sitting in parks and maidans across the city, with young children on their laps.

– Another campaigner for your party, chief minister of Uttar Pradesh Ajay Singh Bisht aka ‘Yogi Adityanath’, kicked off his campaign in Delhi by saying ‘Boli se nahi to goli se maanenge’!

– When the esteemed home minister, Mr Amit Shah asks people to push the EVM button on February 8 with such force “that protesters feel the current”, is he wishing to electrocute the women?

– Is the BJP now openly endangering the lives of India’s women and children? This is what history will record and India will not forgive, Mr Prime Minister. For the nation saw the direct result of this violent atmosphere created by members of your party, which inspired a young man to open fire at innocent students in Jamia Millia Islamia on January 30, and another terrorist weaponised by the hate being spread by your party, fired at the women of Shaheen Bagh on February 1.

– Mr Parvesh Verma, your party MP, said, “Lakhs of people gather there (at Shaheen Bagh). People of Delhi will have to think and take a decision. They’ll enter your houses, rape your sisters and daughters, kill them.”

What is this kind of communal hate and fear mongering that you, as head of government, are encouraging, that seeks to make women of all communities feel more insecure and threatened? Vote for BJP or you will get raped! Is this your election message to Delhi’s women? Is this how low your party has sunk?

Women understand the meaning of rape, Mr Prime Minister. We have long suffered violence on our bodies, with little access to justice, despite your government’s slogan of ‘Beti Bachao’! We condemn this attempt to demean our histories of pain and fear by using it for cheap, divisive electioneering.

We do not fear the Shaheen Baghs of Delhi, Mr Prime Minister. What we fear is a government that directs its security forces to attack peacefully protesting students, women and men. Elected members who openly threaten ordinary citizens. And a police force that stands by and watches as people inspired by this hate-filled rhetoric indulge in acts of violence.

Also read: Why Kerala Has Gone to Supreme Court Against the CAA

Your government may disagree with the reasons for this nation-wide uprising against the NPR-NRC-CAA. But peaceful protest is our constitutional right. That is all we are doing. Lakhs of Delhi’s women are not just part of this movement, they are leading it. Empowered women are on the front lines. We will not be silent when women are labelled terrorists and traitors, when all they are doing it fighting to protect and preserve the Constitution of our country.

Mr Prime Minister, you may belong to BJP, but you are the Prime Minister of the country and have a Constitutional obligation to protect the rights of all citizens. When members of your party exhort mobs to use violence and bullets and you remain silent or support them, remember it is you who are responsible.

  • You need to speak out against such targeted violence and hate speech.
  • You need to take immediate action, including under all relevant criminal provisions of the penal code, against these violence mongering members of your party.
  • You need to fight the Delhi election in a manner that upholds the dignity of our Constitution and ensures the security of India’s women.

Issued by:

Organisations:

1. Saheli Women’s Resource Centre
2. Ajita, Nisha, Rinchin & Shalini, Convenors, Women against Sexual Violence and State Repression (WSS)
3. All India Democratic Women’s Association
4. National Federation of Indian Women
5. All India Progressive Women’s Association
6. Muslim Women’s Forum
7. Pinjra Tod
8. Centre for Struggling Women
9. All India Queer Association
10. Jamia Queer Collective
11. Makaam- Mahila Kisan Adhikar Manch, Delhi
12. Aman Biradari
13. Karwan-e- Mohabbat

Individuals

1. Devaki Jain, Feminist Economist
2. Laila Tyabji, Craft activist and Chairperson, DASTKAR
3. Madhu Bhaduri,former Ambassador of India
4. Navrekha Sharma, former Ambassador of India
5. Zoya Hasan, Former Professor & Member, National Commission for Minorities
6. Uma Chakravarti, Feminist Historian and filmmaker
7. Syeda Hameed, Former Member, Planning Commission of India
8. Kamla Bhasin, Gender Rights Activist
9. Farah Naqvi, Author and Activist
10. Natasha Badhwar, Author and Film-maker
11. Reena Mohan, film maker
12. Nivedita Menon, Professor, JNU
13. Nupur Basu, Journalist
14. Geeta Seshu, Free Speech Collective, Mumbai
15. Geeta Kapur, art critic
16. Enakshi Ganguly, Child Rights activist
17. Anjali Bhardwaj, Satark Nagrik Sangathan
18. Maya Krishna Rao, Theatre artist
19. V. Geetha, Independent feminist scholar
20. Susie Tharu, Independent Scholar and Writer
21. Urvashi Butalia, Publisher
22. Vivan Sundaram, artist
23. Madhusree Dutta, artist
24. Sanjana Sarkar. Head, Institut Francais, Rajasthan Annex
25. Sadhna Arya, Delhi University
26. Brinda Singh, Human Resource Development
27. Deepa Pathak, self employed
28. Lalitha Krishna, Filmmaker
29. Indira C, Delhi
30. Priya Pillai, Delhi
31. Lekha Bhagat, Potter
32. Namita Nayak, Filmmaker
33. Ashima Roy Chowdhry, Feminist Activist
34. Sania Farooqui, Journalist
35. Subasri Krishnan, Filmmaker
36. Suresh Rajamani, Filmmaker
37. Adsa Fatima, Feminist activist
38. Deepa Venkatachalam, Health Activist
39. Shreshtha Das, Independent Consultant
40. Dr. Ponni Arasu, Chennai
41. Nandini Manjrekar
42. Rituparna, Queer Feminist
43. Vani Subramanian, Film maker
44. Nandini Rao, feminist activist
45. Ritambhara, Feminist
46. Ananya Iyer, Student, M.A. Women’s Studies
47. Seema Baquer, Cross Disability consultant
48. Suneeta Dhar, activist
49. Rafiul Alom Rahman, Queer Activist
50. Shipra Nigam, research scholar
51. Dipta Bhog, feminist activist
52. Malini Ghose. New Delhi
53. Archana Dwivedi, Feminist Activist
54. Purnima Gupta, Feminist Activist
55. Rakhi Sehgal, Researcher & Trade Unionist
56. Savita Sharma, Feminist Activist
57. Shirin, entrepreneur
58. Amrita Johri, Activist
59. Abha Choudhuri, Concerned citizen
60. Geeta Sahai, Writer, Filmmaker, Social entrepreneur
61. Freny Khodaiji, Film Producer, Animal Rights Activist
62. Minnie Vaid, Filmmaker and Author
63. Padmaja Shaw, Retired Professor, Journalism, Osmania University
64. Sharmin Khodaiji, Senior Research Associate, O. P. Jindal Global University
65. Shernaz Italia, Film Producer, Animal Rights Activist
66. Usha Rao, Anthropologist/independent media maker
67. Hansa Thapliyal, Filmmaker
68. Rahul Roy, Filmmaker
69. Janaki Abraham, Academic
70. Kavita Bahl, Filmmaker
71. Nandan Saxena, Filmmaker
72. Nishtha Jain, Filmmaker
73. Radha Misra, Academic
74. Ranjan Palit, Filmmaker
75. Saba Dewan, Filmmaker, Author
76. Samina Mishra, Filmmaker
77. Uma Tanuku, Filmmaker
78. Aamana Singh, Graphic Designer
79. A.M. Padmanabhan, audiographer
80. Anjana Mangalagiri, Educationist
81. Devika Menon, PhD Scholar
82. Kanupriya Sharma, Sr. Archivist, New Delhi
83. Neena Verma, Filmmaker
84. Pooja Singh, Development professional, New Delhi
85. Preeti Gulati, PhD scholar
86. Sanjana Manaktala, Development professional, New Delhi
87. Vasundhara Chauhan, Concerned Citizen
88. Vanita Nayak Mukherjee, concerned citizen
89. Bharathy Singaravel, Writer
90. Dipti Bhalla Verma, Filmmaker
91. Shakti Kak, concerned citizen
92. Richa Hushing, Filmmaker
93. Rrivu Laha, Filmmaker
94. Brij Tankha, Academic
95. Bursenla,Media Lab, Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bengaluru
96. Gauri D. Chakraborty, Academic
97. Kamini Tankha, Concerned citizen
98. Kristine Michael, Artist
99. Mirza Afzal Beg, Farmer
100. Ridhima Mehra, Concerned Citizen
101. Anandita Jumde, Editor
102. Archana Kapoor, Filmmaker
103. Ayisha Abraham, Academic, Artist
104. Mahima, Business
105. Dimple Oberoi Vahali
106. Meenakshi Barooah, Filmmaker
107. Muraleedharan C K, Cinematographer
108. Nabeela Rizvi, filmmaker and researcher
109. Namita Unnikrishnan, Therapist
110. Nilita Vachani, Filmmaker/ Educator
111. Rohini Devraj, Filmmaker
112. Samreen Farooqui, Filmmaker
113. Senjuti Mukherjee, Researcher, Archivist, Writer
114. Sheena Jain, independent researcher
115. Sherna Dastur, Graphic Designer
116. Sumalata K, Creative Director
117. Svetlana Naudiyal, Film Programmer
118. Urmi Juvekar, Screenwriter
119. Anumeha, Journalist
120. Jayoo Patwardhan, Architect, Filmmaker, Art Director
121. Jeroo Mulla, Educationist
122. Maya Palit, Journalist
123. Renu Gourisaria, retired schoolteacher
124. Mrinalini Vasudevan, Writer and Editor
125. Shalini Mukerji, Canine Trainer
126. Ratna Golaknath, Psychotherapist
127. Aradhana Anand, Furniture Designer
128. Rita Singh, retired school teacher
129. Ritambhara Shastri, journalist
130. Mala Srikanth, Doctor
131. Mimansa Sahay – Graphic Designer and Diver
132. Shabani Hassanwalia, New Delhi
133. Disha Mullick, Delhi
134. Pali Singh, student, DU
135. Arushi Mathur, Dancer
136. Satnam Kaur
137. Geeta Thatra, PhD student, JNU
138. Titas Ghosh, feminist researcher, New Delhi
139. Abhiti, Lawyer, Delhi
140. Abhilasha, Law Student, Delhi University
141. Suroor Mander, Lawyer
142. Honey Oberoi Vahali
143. Prabha N
144. Aamana Singh, New Delhi
145. Radha Mahendru, Art Worker
146. Faustina Johnson, Editor
147. Anne Correa, Lawyer
148. Drishya Nair, Scientist/researcher
149. Joyeeta Dey, researcher
150. Jennifer Areng Datta, Filmmaker, Film editor
151. Mallika Visvanathan, filmmaker, researcher
152. Pooja Madhavan, Editor
153. Pia Hazarika, illustrator
154. Diamond Oberoi Vahali
155. Veena, Cncerned citizen
156. Shagun Talwar, Consultant
157. Noopur, Ed-tech consultant
158. Ein Lall, Filmmaker
159. Sumona Chakravarty, Artist
160. Sinjita Basu, Educational Specialist, Bangalore
161. Sreemoyee Singh, PhD Scholar
162. Farha Khatun, Filmmaker

NIA Questions IIT Guwahati Professor Involved in Anti-CAA Protests

Saikia was reportedly asked about his telephone calls to KMSS activists during the protests.

New Delhi: The National Investigation Agency, according to a Hindu report, questioned IIT Guwahati teacher Arupjyoti Saikia for over four hours.

It is being suspected that he was summoned due to his involvement in protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, said reports.

Saikia teaches history at IIT Guwahati and was questioned at an NIA office on the outskirts of Guwahati.

The NIA has taken a dim view of the statewide demonstrations against the CAA in Assam. In the middle of the protests, it arrested farmers’ leader Akhil Gogoi and three other leaders of his organisation, Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti. The case for which Gogoi was held dates back to 2019.

Saikia was reportedly asked about his telephone calls to KMSS activists during the protests, reported Northeast Now.

Saikia is a renowned scholar and the author of The Unquiet River: A Biography of the Brahmaputra. He has written four other books on the particular cultural and agrarian history of the region.

In December, state finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma had claimed that his government had evidence that a major academic had played an important role in the protests against the citizenship law, reported the portal.

Sarma had said the academic was involved in a conspiracy to orchestrate the burning of Assam Secretariat at the Dispur capital complex.

IIT Guwahati’s electrical and electronics engineering professor Brijesh Kumar Rai was recently in the news after the institute’s board of governors ordered him on January 1 to vacate his residential quarters by the end of the month, and leave on ‘compulsory retirement’ on grounds of alleged misconduct. Rai had alleged corruption and nepotism at the institute. A senior official had also lodged an FIR against him for alleged intimidation.

Scholars release statement in protest

Eminent scholars of India’s top universities have released a statement in support of Saikia, and condemning his harassment in the hands of the NIA.

“That a scholar of such standing, and a human being of such decency, has been called for intensive grilling by the National Investigative Agency is deeply distressing. We urge that the NIA treat him with the dignity and respect he deserves, and allow him to continue his professional work unimpeded,” the professors write.

Among signatories are Ramachandra Guha, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Sukanta Chaudhuri, Supriya Chaudhuri, Nandini Sundar, Partha Chatterjee, Niraja Gopal Jayal and many others.

Statement on Arupjyoti Saikia by The Wire on Scribd