Twitter Moves Karnataka High Court, Asks for Judicial Review of Modi Govt’s Takedown Orders

India’s IT ministry did not immediately respond on Tuesday to a request for comment about Twitter’s legal move.

New Delhi: Twitter on Tuesday asked an Indian court to overturn some government orders to remove content from the social media platform, a source familiar with the matter said, in a legal challenge which alleges abuse of power by officials.

The U.S. company’s attempt to get a judicial review of the orders is part of a growing confrontation with New Delhi.

Twitter has been asked by Indian authorities over the past year to act on content including accounts supportive of an independent Sikh state, posts alleged to have spread misinformation about protests by farmers and over tweets critical of the government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

India’s IT ministry did not immediately respond on Tuesday to a request for comment about Twitter’s legal move.

The Indian government has previously said that big social media firms, including Twitter, have not complied with removal requests, despite their legal standing.

Late last month, Twitter was warned by India’s IT ministry of criminal proceedings if it did not comply with some orders. Twitter complied this week, the source said, so as not to lose liability exemptions available as a host of content.

In a filing with the top court in the southern Indian state of Karnataka, Twitter argued that some removal orders fell short of the procedural requirements of India’s IT act, the source said, without specifying which ones it wanted reviewed.

The IT act allows the government to block public access to content in the interest of national security, among other reasons.

Twitter, which market research firms say has nearly 24 million users in India, also argues in its filing that some of the orders failed to give notice to authors of the content.

It says that some were related to political content posted by official handles of political parties, the blocking of which amount to violation of freedom of speech, the source added.

Tensions with the Indian government flared early last year when Twitter declined to fully comply with an order to take down accounts and posts which New Delhi alleged were spreading misinformation about anti-government protests by farmers.

The company has also been subject to police investigations in India and last year many Indian government ministers moved to domestically developed platform Koo, accusing Twitter of non-compliance with local laws.

Twitter has also faced a backlash in India for blocking accounts of influential individuals, including politicians, citing violations of its policies.

India, which industry transparency reports show has among the highest government requests for content takedowns, is considering some amendments to its new IT rules, including the introduction of a government-run appeals panel with the power to reverse the content moderation decisions of social media firms.

New Delhi has said such measures were needed because the companies had violated Indians’ constitutional rights.

Balancing National Security and Fundamental Rights in Environmental Cases

Reckless, short-sighted, rapid and uncontrolled changes are being made in the Himalayas which are causing incalculable loss and damage to an already fragile ecosystem.

On February 7 this year, Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district in the outer Garhwal Himalayas witnessed one of its major natural disasters in recent years that left over 200 killed or missing. Of the missing and dead, 140 were workers at the Tapovan Hydropower Plant site. This disaster was caused due to a large avalanche dislodged from the Ronti peak that led to flooding in the Chamoli district.

Reports claim that the slope movement that caused the avalanche began way back in 2016. They also attribute the massive slope failure to “regional climate and related changes in frozen ice that interacted in a complex way with the geological features of the region”.

This is not the only natural disaster to have claimed lives and livelihood in the Himalayas. The ferocious October flash floods that claimed at least 54 lives this year in Uttarakhand is another recent incident. One cannot forget the devastation that flash floods in Kedarnath caused in 2013, when more than 5,000 lives were lost.

Frequent forest fires, flash floods, cloud bursts, earthquakes and landslides in the region are evidence of it being in an extremely fragile and vulnerable zone geographically. Climate change and global warming further exacerbate the already precarious situation. The Union government’s own report claims that the region has gotten warmer by 1.5 degrees Celsius between 1951-2014.

Seismic activity is common in the Himalayas, making the region susceptible to earthquakes and landslides. In India’s seismic zonation map, Uttarakhand state falls in seismic zones IV and V – both denoting very high risk.

The above facts point towards the many risks to lives and livelihood faced by the people living in the region by any activity which destabilises the mountains.

The cutting of slopes for roads or hydel projects certainly causes such destabilisation. However, it’s not just the people of the region who are victims. The Himalayas, by their very nature, are not a closed system. They also have profound effects on the whole of the sub-continent and particularly their northern plains. Rivers, for instance, that originate in the Himalayas, feed much of the country and much of our agriculture is dependent on it.

It is, therefore, crucial that human and state interventions in the region must be scientific, evidence-based and rationally coherent. However, the opposite is the truth today. Reckless, short-sighted, rapid and uncontrolled changes are being made in the region which are causing incalculable loss and damage to an already fragile ecosystem.

Rescue team members work near a tunnel after a part of a glacier broke away and flooded Tapovan, Uttarakhand, February 8, 2021. Photo: Reuters/Stringer

The Char Dham Project adds fuel to fire

The Char Dham project is a flagship initiative of the Union government – a Rs 12,000-crore highway expansion project that was envisaged in 2016 to widen 889 kilometres of hill roads to provide all-weather connectivity in the Char Dham circuit, covering Uttarakhand’s four major shrines: Badrinath, Kedarnath, Gangotri and Yamunotri. The project, by its very nature, is perilous for the ecology of the Himalayas.

There were several concerns against the project right from the start. It was pushed through without clearances and valid permission, by falsely declaring that the stretches did not fall under the eco-sensitive zones and by clearly violating all Supreme Court’s directives. An Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of the project was not carried out. In fact, the Union government found a way to avoid environmental scrutiny by claiming that the project was made of “53 civil works”, each less than 100 km in length. Since 2013, highway expansion projects of less than 100 km in India have been exempt from EIA.

Image: Protected Areas of Uttarakhand and the Char Dham Project routes. Source: WII/HPC Report

In 2018, a petition before the NGT challenged the legality of the project. The tribunal set up an oversight committee but the petitioners decided to appeal to the Supreme Court, which modified the tribunal’s order and directed the environment ministry to form a high-powered committee (HPC), under the chairmanship of Ravi Chopra, an environmentalist, in August 2019. The Committee was tasked with recommending, among other things, the ideal width of the carriageway for the project. It submitted two reports after members failed to come to a conclusion.

The Supreme Court upheld the recommendation of four HPC members, including Chopra, to limit the carriageway to 5.5 metres based on the existing regulations. The majority report of 21 HPC members favoured a width of 12 metres as envisaged in the project. The reason behind favouring a narrower road was because a wider road would require additional slope cutting, blasting, tunnelling, dumping and deforestation – all of which would further destabilise the terrain, disturb the natural slope of the hill and increase slope failures, landslides and flash floods.

However, by the time the Supreme Court intervened this year, the project had already caused substantial damage as was also pointed out in Chopra’s report. Nearly 700 hectares of forest land had already been lost due to the cutting down of thousands of trees and the flow of streams and springs were severely impacted due to their blockages as a result of muck dumping. Roads had been widened by cutting hillsides, heavy earth excavators had been used instead of less destructive equipment and none of the slope protection measures were followed.

Also read: A Widened Char Dham Highway Will Not Help Lessen the China Threat From Tibet

The Union government’s ‘National Security’ rationalisation

The Union government has now argued before the top court seeking “a double-lane road having a carriageway width of 7 metres and formation width of 8-10 metres to meet the requirements of the army”. The Union government has referred to the recent India-China standoff as a justification for a wider carriageway on the ‘strategic highway’ which goes up to the China border.

The attorney general for India K.K. Venugopal while appearing for the Union government before the Supreme Court said, “There has been tremendous build-up on the other side of the border. They have ramped up infrastructure and built airstrips, helipads, roads, railway line networks which proceed on the assumption that they are going to be there permanently.”

He further said, “The country cannot afford to have a repeat of the 1962 war-like situation when Army supplies were made on foot up to the India-China borders. We cannot be caught napping just like in 1962. If the road is not two-lane then the purpose of having a road is defeated. Hence, double laning should be permitted.”

There are two specific concerns that warrant our attention at this stage.

Firstly, the Union government’s ‘National Security/Defence of the State’ argument and the fear-mongering around it before the court is an afterthought and at best an ex-post-facto rationalisation of the project. It is an open secret that the Char Dham project is, as its very name suggests, designed to promote tourism and improve connectivity to the four holy shrines of the Hindu religion. Even the minister for roads and national highways, Nitin Gadkari, while arguing for the project back in 2017, said, “This will be the biggest gift to people as pilgrimage to Char Dham remains high on people’s agenda as this is an issue linked with faith.”

Even the government’s official website states that the project is aimed at “connectivity improvement for Char-Dham”. Reports even claim that the Army never said that they wanted wider roads.

The second concern, however, warrants closer attention. It originates from a question that the Supreme Court too, while hearing the Union government’s appeal earlier this month, wondered about. The court said, “Can we say that environment protection will triumph over the defence needs of the nation”?

This question points towards a larger problem that revolves around the debate between national security versus fundamental rights of the citizens and the question as to which of the two should be given primacy in cases where there are serious environmental concerns.

Two-fold answer

There are specific responses to both the concerns raised above and this piece shall attempt to answer them into two parts. Firstly, that merely because the state has invoked the argument on national security, it does not necessarily bar the court from exercising its power of judicial review. Secondly, that the national security argument does not provide carte blanche power to the state to violate the fundamental rights of citizens. The court shall use its power of judicial review and apply the ‘doctrine of proportionality’ to balance competing interests to further principles of sustainable development.

Also read: Is Uttarakhand Govt’s ‘Demographic’ Probe of Property Deals a Play on ‘Land Jihad’ Bogey?

The power of judicial review when ‘national security’ is invoked

The Constituent Assembly debates reveal that the judiciary, as an institution, was envisaged as an extension of the rights guaranteed under the constitution. The members of the assembly were very particular about the power of judicial review in India. They wanted it to be more ‘direct’, ‘explicit’ and ‘conferred’ rather than ‘indirect’, ‘implicit’ and ‘inferred’ as was the case in the US. That is precisely why we find explicit provisions of judicial review in the Indian constitution in Articles 13(2) and 32(1).

However, there was a huge controversy among the members of the assembly over the question of reconciling competing interests of ‘individual rights’ vs ‘national security’ and ‘socio-economic needs of the nation’. This was also a time when socialism was at its full swing and national aspirations were heavily shaped around the partition, and the bloodshed that followed had raised serious security concerns for the state. It is in these contexts that a compromise had to be stuck on the above controversy of competing interests. Consequentially, the power of judicial review was heavily curtailed. One evidence of that is the removal of the “due process clause” from the final text of the constitution which was initially a part of the original draft constitution.

However, this debate was far from over. For a very long time after that, judicial review was seemingly put on trial, especially in cases involving concerns around national security. The Supreme Court seemed to walk directly into the trap of the state as and when arguments around the defence of the nation were raised. Some examples of these cases include Peoples Union for Civil Liberties vs Union of India; Kartar Singh vs State of Punjab; Naga Peoples’ Movement of Human Rights vs Union of India; Prakash Chandra Mehta vs Commissioner and Secretary, Government Of Kerala And Others

In fact in 2014, the Supreme Court in Ex-Armymen’s Protection Services Private Limited vs Union of India & Ors held: “What is in the interest of national security is not a question of law. It is a matter of policy. It is not for the court to decide whether something is in the interest of the state or not. It should be left to the executive.”

One is reminded of the famous dissenting words of British judge Lord James Atkin in Liversidge vs Anderson (1941) where he said that when it comes to national security, the courts tend to become “more executive minded than the executive itself”. This was true of the Indian Supreme Court as well.

supreme court contempt hearing

The Supreme Court of India. Photo: PTI.

However, the debate now seems to have been settled after two recent landmark decisions of the Supreme Court in Anuradha Bhasin & Ors vs Union of India and M.L. Sharma vs Union of India & Ors.

In M.L. Sharma, the court while putting the debate to rest, held as follows:

“It is a settled position of law that in matters pertaining to national security, the scope of judicial review is limited. However, this does not mean that the state gets a free pass every time the spectre of ‘national security’ is raised. National security cannot be the bugbear that the judiciary shies away from, by virtue of its mere mentioning. Although this court should be circumspect in encroaching upon the domain of national security, no omnibus prohibition can be called for against judicial review. The state must justify the stand that they take before a court. The mere invocation of national security does not render the court a mute spectator.”

For years the Supreme Court has held that the ‘right to clean and safe environment’ is a fundamental right [Subhash Kumar vs State of Bihar; Rural Litigation and Enlightenment Kendra vs State of UP; M.C. Mehta vs Union of India; Charan Lal Sahu vs Union of India; T.N. Godavarman vs Union of India] and when there is an identifiable risk of serious or irreversible harm to the environment, including, for instance, extinction of species, major threats to ecological processes, the burden of proof shall be placed on the person or entity proposing the activity that is potentially harmful to the environment.

This is also known as the precautionary principle [Vellore Citizen’s Welfare Forum vs Union of India]. It is this burden that the state has wanted to shift by raising the argument of national security in the Char Dham project case thinking that the court will grant it complete authority. The law laid down in M.L. Sharma, therefore, becomes crucial and significant.

In Vijay Narain Singh ss State of Bihar, Justice Chinnappa Reddy’s concurring opinion in the matter is pertinent herein where he said:

“The constitution of India does not give a carte blanche to any organ of the state to be the sole arbiter in matters of maintenance of security. So it is too perilous a proposition to say that the authorities concerned must be the sole judges of what the national security or public order requires.”

Doctrine of proportionality

To understand how the court will use its power of judicial review in cases where competing interests between national security and environmental concerns exist, we shall have to again revisit the Constituent Assembly debates.

Once fundamental rights were made a part of the draft constitution, the real issue now was to decide acceptable ways to limit them. The rationale behind limiting these rights was the situational context in which the country had gained independence. The horrible communal violence that occurred during partition had a profound impact on the minds of the constitution drafters. Resultantly, the Assembly had to again face the question of fundamental rights versus national security.

The Fundamental Rights Sub-Committee had drafted the “right to freedom” provisions and had voted to qualify each with the proviso that the exercise of these rights would be subject to “public order and morality”. During these deliberations, the Drafting Committee made the rights of free speech, assembly, association, and movement subject to public order, morality, health, decency, and public interest. During the debate on the draft Constitution, speakers attacked the proviso regarding public order and morality. During the cacophony that continued for quite some time, it was Thakur Das Bhargava who proposed an amendment that, in many ways, put a ‘soul’ back into the provisions relating to fundamental freedoms. He proposed to insert the word “reasonable” before “restrictions” in the various provisos. This proposed amendment was adopted.

Thakur Das Bhargava, therefore, was responsible, and fortunately so, for having introduced the concept of proportionality (through the idea of ‘reasonable restrictions’) in the Indian jurisprudence. This led the Supreme Court to further evolve this doctrine from time to time.

The doctrine of proportionality, as explained by Lord Diplock in R v Goldsmith (1983), is that “you must not steam hammer to crack a nut if a nut cracker will do”. The words of the Supreme Court of India in the landmark K.S. Puttaswamy judgment [reiterated in Anuradha Bhasin] are significant in this context.

The court held as follows:

“Proportionality is an essential facet of the guarantee against arbitrary state action because it ensures that the nature and quality of the encroachment on the right is not disproportionate to the purpose of the law.”

Also read: Rebuilding This Himalayan Village Would Prove India Is Serious About Its Environmental Commitments

Testing the Char Dham Project on the anvil of proportionality

In Anuradha Bhasin, the Supreme Court laid down the test for a court to balance competing interests based on the doctrine of proportionality. It held that first the court must look at the ‘possible goal’ intended to be achieved, the goal must be ‘legitimate’ and the state must ‘assess the existence of all alternative mechanisms’ before proceeding with the said restriction. It further added that the appropriateness of such a restriction will depend on its ‘impact on the fundamental rights of citizens’ and the ‘necessity’ of the restriction. It added that the action must be supported by ‘sufficient material’. The court specifically pointed out that the degree and scope of the restriction, both territorially as well as temporally, should be looked at.

It is important to point out that the state in the Char Dham project has followed none of these obligations as laid down by the Supreme Court. The goals of the project have changed from ‘promoting tourism’ to ‘better connectivity’ and now ‘national security’. There is no evidence to suggest that even if this is indeed necessary for the defence of the nation, other alternative mechanisms were assessed before carrying out the project or that this particular action is supported by enough evidences and research (given that no prior consultation, EIA or any kind of assessment was conducted). None of those burdens have been fulfilled.

It is clearly evident that the state’s policies are designed based on a flawed understanding of what development looks like. Pushing developmental projects at the cost of the environment that ends up adversely impacting the lives of millions of people and puts their very existence at stake, is not just a bad design but a patently unconstitutional and illegal act. Despite clear warnings, we have consistently ignored the various risks of rampant exploitation of the environment and the nature in the name of development. The Char Dham project is only one among several such projects. We now need to sketch sustainable models of growth where innocent citizens are not made to suffer as collateral damage time and again.

Prashant Bhushan is a public interest advocate practising at the Supreme Court of India. Anurag Tiwary is a final year undergraduate student of law at the National Law University, Visakhapatnam.

The Judiciary Needs to Be Gently Reminded About the Constitution and Its Key Concepts

India’s constitutional courts were put in place to protect the rights of all, especially those not in the majority. The judiciary had a great opportunity to do just that but squandered it.

Someone very poignantly said, “We are all dying – that is the condition of living.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who very bravely and unilaterally imposed the nationwide lockdown with just four hours’ notice on March 24, has now, after ostensible consultation with chief ministers, as shown on our television sets, lifted it from June 8. Of course, in a graded manner and with restrictions.

Perhaps he realised the meaning of the line I began this article with. Critics might rightly say that the timing of both decisions was wrong. 

If only he had kept national interest at heart and given serious thought at the end of January itself – by merely prohibiting foreigners from entering India and making Indians returning from abroad compulsorily go through four weeks of strict quarantine – the pandemic could have been better controlled. 

But that would have meant not being able to shake hands with Donald Trump during his visit. It would also have barred the entry of a few thousand NRIs to be part of the fanfare in Ahmedabad.

So that would have, in turn, meant no publicity for our prime minister and no work for his PR machinery to deliver a larger than life image of an international leader. 

Of course, a temporary ban on international visitors would have stopped hundreds of foreigners from attending the Nizammuddin Markaz. But then, how the minority bashing have become possible? And how would the police, especially in Delhi and Uttar Pradesh, have been able to criminalise the sickness of unfortunate patients?

Also read: Report Says Tablighi Chief’s Viral Audio Clip May Have Been Doctored, Police Deny Claim

On a more pertinent note, New Zealand has declared itself a ‘coronavirus-free’ nation. And one of the reasons attributed is the timely banning of foreigners and the compulsory quarantining of returning citizens. That is how a responsible and responsive government acts.

In India, our government can play with the lives of millions of citizens and wreak havoc on the economy, further affecting hundreds of millions, with impunity. There is no accountability whatsoever.

Our politicians, across the spectrum, only care for themselves, their well cut images and electoral successes. What else can one say except that it is political nakedness which is on display in the Rajya Sabha election in Gujarat at a time of national crisis.

Also read: Rajasthan: Impending RS Polls Set off Alarm Bells as Gehlot Makes off With MLAs

On the one hand, the BJP government at the Centre invokes the Disaster Management Act to fight the ostensible disaster, and on the other it is creating a political disaster by using everything at its command to buy one more seat in the upper house. We, the citizens, have to sit and watch in indignation. 

In India, democracy functions only during elections. Once it is over, and they are in the driver’s seat, politicians forget who put them there. 

But they alone are not to be blamed. The very constitution which has created the executive has also created the legislature and more importantly, the judiciary.

The executive power of the Union vests in the president and he shall exercise that power in accordance with the constitution as per article 53 of the constitution . Thus that power is clearly hedged by the contours of the constitution and is not outside of it . 

The framers were clear in their intentions. There must be checks and balances within the state. Parliament may not keep that check in constitutional spirit due to majoritarianism of the party in power, although it should. Yet, the constitution of India is founded on the principle of ‘pluralism’ and rejects the idea of a single norm. Here, the judiciary’s role assumes great significance.

If there was no constitution, there would have been no power to strike down laws and executive actions. Judicial review is foundational in the Indian constitution and the judiciary alone can interpret the constitution. In fact, it is their duty.

The judiciary was, notably, not created by the framers to be “the least dangerous branch.”

The constitution establishes concepts and not conceptions. Clear provisions in the constitution emphatically say so. Framers gave citizens fundamental rights and enjoined the Supreme Court and the high courts to protect them under Articles 32 and 226 respectively. 

Also read: The Delhi High Court Was Right to Call NIA to Account for Gautam Navlakha’s Hasty Removal

Judicial review of laws and administrative actions is thus expressly mandated. The constitution recognises one paramount principle: “Be you ever so high, the law is above you.”

‘Judicial activism’ is therefore a misnomer. The constitution delegates power to the courts to enforce its own conceptions of political morality so long as its conception is relatable to standard concepts, i.e., the articles thereunder. 

It is political skepticism which seeks to label this as judicial activism. Skeptics seek to restrict judicial power by fashioning labels of judicial restraint or judicial deference as democratic arguments, saying moral and political principles must be resolved by institutions which are politically responsible – which courts are not. Democracy does not mean so. In fact there is no rule limiting judicial review. Our Supreme Court has gone to the extent of holding that “there is no decision which is un-reviewable under the constitution.” 

Also read: The Supreme Court Is Locked Down and Justice Is in ‘Emergency’ Care

Issues relating to fundamental rights should not be left to the majorities because our constitution seeks to restrain majorities.

If so, can such issues be left to the majority so it can become the judge in its own cause? Definitely not, as that would be inconsistent and unjust. Disputes involving citizens’ rights are best protected by courts rather than institutions of government, which would be clearly hostile. The only effective review is in courts. 

It would be unconstitutional to allow those in political power to be the sole judges of their own decisions.

Any argument of judicial tyranny is overshadowed by unfairness in allowing the majority to be a judge in its own cause. This is only to provide limits to the power of the majority and not to give any additional or unconstitutional power to the judiciary. 

Courts develop constitutional principles based on constitutional morality, plus a set of rules that justify governmental actions. Courts do indeed lean in favour of community morality or what is called the “public interest”; part of this process is to give meaning to life and dignity as encompassed in Article 21. 

The migrant crisis, involving violations of a bundle of those rights of hundreds of millions of citizens following the fateful lockdown demanded that the judiciary activate itself. If only the Supreme Court or a high court has stayed that declaration for a week or so to enable government to facilitate the transfer of migrant workers in a humane manner, the whole problem would have been solved without any affront to the government. This would have amounted to simple judicial function and not activism. The migrants had nowhere to turn. 

Also read: Have SC’s Directions to Redress Migrants’ Suffering Brought Necessary Course-Correction?

What a golden opportunity the judiciary missed of wiping away the tears of teeming millions! Their much delayed reaction to the crisis is an admission of initial failure and is too late and too little. 

How and if at all the nation compensates them for their sufferings is a vexed question which judges have not even attempted to answer. 

Judges, too, make mistakes. But they cannot simply forego their duty to uphold the basic human rights of citizens – the very rights which can be taken away by a heartless government. The danger of attracting the criticism of judicial activism is vastly overshadowed by the outcome of justice being meted out to citizens, especially from the poor and vulnerable sections of the society.

It was for these citizens that the Public Interest Litigation or PIL was conceived by great judges. In fact, the time has come to sensitise judges not just to the problems of the poor and helpless but as to their own powers and duties.

If this does not work, the nation must think of changing the process of selecting judges and not change the technique of judging. 

I am reminded of the words of a great historian who said:

I would not care whether the truth is pleasant or unpleasant, in consonance with or opposed to current views. I would not mind in the least whether the truth is or is not a blow to the glory of the country.

If necessary, I shall bear in patience the ridicule and slander of friends and society for the sake of preaching truth. But still I shall seek truth, understand truth, accept truth.”

This should be the firm resolve of every citizen, and even more so of every judge. 

Dushyant Dave is a senior advocate at the Supreme Court of India and the President of Supreme Court Bar Association.

The views expressed are personal do not represent the views of the Bar. 

Lok Sabha Bags Apology from Hindustan Times, But Should MPs Use Privilege Motion to Police Media?

Parliamentary privileges are increasingly being used as a sword by legislators to threaten those whom they feel have defamed or obstructed them.

Parliamentary privileges are increasingly being used as a sword by legislators to threaten those whom they feel have defamed or obstructed them.

A view of the Indian parliament building is seen in New Delhi. Credit: Reuters

The committee of privileges of the 16th Lok Sabha, headed by Meenakshi Lekhi, member of parliament (MP) of the Bharatiya Janata Party, recently tabled its ninth report on the floor of the Lok Sabha regarding the publication of an alleged “defamatory” news item in the Hindustan Times on March 24, 2017, regarding the attendance rates of certain MPs.

The news item had prominently featured the photographs, names and attendance rates of five MPs with the lowest attendance. One of those MPs, Jitender Reddy, had filed a privilege notice with the committee on the grounds that the Hindustan Times report was defamatory and in breach of parliamentary privilege since his actual attendance rate was 87%, thereby causing the committee headed by Lekhi to take up the issue for inquiry.

From a reading of the committee’s report, there is little doubt that the Hindustan Times committed an embarrassing error in putting out the statistics. As admitted by its then editor-in-chief Aparisim Bobby Ghosh before the privileges committee, the figures put out by the newspaper initially were completely incorrect. The newspaper had sourced the data from the not-for-profit think-tank, Parliamentary Research Service (PRS), in the form of a Microsoft Excel sheet, but made several blunders while processing the information. The relevant portion of Ghosh’s testimony before the committee is as follows:

“The data we got from PRS is accurate. The error was on our side when we analysed the data. They were absolutely right that the data they gave us is one hundred percent correct. When we put it on our Excel sheet, we took all the names of MPs alphabetically and on another column, we looked at their attendance record. First, it was done alphabetically. Then, you change the column to see who has the highest and who has the lowest. Since the system was bad at our end, not at PRS end, because it was not properly configured, the column with attendance changed, but the column with names did not change. That is why, you will notice that most of the names are starting with ‘A’ because the alphabetical order on the first column just remained as it was and we did not spot that. We assumed that both sets of column would change, which they should if the system is properly put together. It was not.”

In other words, somebody within the Hindustan Times committed serious blunders while analysing and putting together the data on MS Excel, thereby leading to the erroneous percentages that were published on the front page of the story. This error could have been avoided if the journalists behind the story had called the MPs in question to confirm the figures and if they had asked them for their version of the story. After all, asking the target of a news report for their comment is the most basic lesson of journalism.

On the next day, after discovering its error, the paper published a clarification with the correct figures. However, as pointed out by Jitender Reddy in his deposition, “While the report was carried out on the top with the pictures of the supposedly erring members and commentary citing how absence of members raise questions of accountability and commitment. A corrigendum on the other hand is published on the left bottom corner stating that the corrected and prior wrong figures taking far lesser space than the false report.”

During the course of the proceedings, the managing editor of Hindustan Times, Soumya Bhattacharya, agreed to publish an apology on the same page and in the same format as the report which put out the wrong facts. His testimony before the committee was as follows:

“We will carry an apology in whichever way you would like us to. I am afraid, I again must emphasize that if the apology we carried does not seem adequate, we will carry an apology anyway you would like us to as we are sincere when we are apologizing. Please believe me we are genuinely sincerely apologetic about the matter.”

This apology was published on September 18, 2017. A week earlier, Ghosh’s departure from the Hindustan Times was publicly announced for “personal reasons” just days prior to his deposition before the committee.

Credit: Gayatri Krishnamoorthy/Flickr CC-BY-2.0

But returning to the topic of the proceedings by the privilege’s committee, I must point out that the inquiry into the Hindustan Times on publications of wrong attendance rates isn’t the first time a newspaper has been hauled up. As I’ve written in the Hoot earlier, the Times of India was hauled up for publishing erroneous figures based on a parliamentary report that had not yet been tabled before the House. Over the last two years, the committee has also summoned at least nine senior journalists for other hearings.

Regardless of the errors that led to these inquiries, the larger question that we must pose at this stage is whether journalistic mistakes should be punished for breach of privilege and contempt of the parliament?

The issue of parliamentary privileges has for long been a controversial one. Enshrined in the constitution, these privileges shield the legislators from any legal actions for any speech that they may make in parliament. At the same time, however, these privileges are also sometimes used as a sword by legislators to threaten those whom they feel have defamed or obstructed them. Very often, the targets of the ire of our MPs are lower-level bureaucrats who, in the opinion of the MPs, have insulted them.

Are these MPs abusing their parliamentary privileges? That is a difficult question because parliamentary privileges have not been defined in the constitution and parliamentary committees have steadfastly recommended against codifying such privileges. Article 105 of the constitution is very vague on the scope of such privileges. The power, however, is used by parliament for a range of activities – from initiating inquiries against journalists to treating certain aspects of proceedings before the committee as confidential.

It is a small relief that parliament has been much more circumspect about using its privileges to jail people, unlike some state legislatures in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra who have invoked their legislative privileges to imprison journalists and common citizens.

In the case of Karnataka, the legislative assembly controlled by the Indian National Congress (INC) sentenced two journalists to jail last year for allegedly breaching the privilege of the assembly.

In 2003, the Tamil Nadu legislature sentenced journalists and editors at The Hindu to jail for 15 days.

The judiciary is usually reluctant to review such actions by legislatures and there is also controversy and confusion over whether legislative privilege can be subject to judicial review.

This reluctance of the courts to review such an exercise of the power of privilege is even more of a reason to be concerned about the manner in which the legislature exercises its power to punish for breach of privilege.

It may, however, be time to ask whether legislators, like any other citizen, should be required to protect their reputation, like the common man, under ordinary civil law of defamation or administrative procedures before the Press Council, rather than invoking a constitutional power that is not subject to independent judicial review.

Prashant Reddy T. is an assistant professor at the National Academy for Legal Studies and Research (NALSAR), Hyderabad and is co-author of Create, Copy, Disrupt: India’s Intellectual Property Dilemmas (OUP).