The
Supreme Court stays the
summons issued to Ashis Nandy for writing an article critical of
Gujarat's middle class.
On July 1, a Supreme Court Bench comprising Justices Altamas
Kabir and G.S. Singhvi expressed its anguish at the growing intolerance
over free expression of one's views. The occasion was the hearing of
the plea of the political psychologist Professor Ashis Nandy of the
Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi, for protection
against arrest or detention by the Gujarat Police. Nandy feared that a
first information report (FIR) registered against him at the Satellite
Police Station in Ahmedabad in May would enable the Gujarat Police to
arrest him whenever he travelled out of Delhi, especially to a State
ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party or its allies.
Nandy moved the Supreme Court after the Delhi High Court refused to
grant him anticipatory bail. Even as the Supreme Court was hearing his
plea, the Gujarat Police issued a summons to Nandy, which only
vindicated his fears. The Bench not only stayed the summons but
expressed its serious concern over the State government's handling of
the issue. It observed that Nandy was harassed because he was a soft
target. It found nothing objectionable in Nandy's article, published in
The Times of India, which became the cause of action against him by the
Gujarat Police.
The stinging article, which appeared on the newspaper's editorial page
on January 8, deplored the culture of Gujarat's urban middle class.
Titled "Blame the Middle Class", it analysed the political situation in
Gujarat in the aftermath of the Assembly elections in December 2007.
Arguing that development in the State justifies amorality, abridgement
of freedom and collapse of social ethics, Nandy alleged that Gujarat's
cities and, particularly, educational institutions were turning into
cultural deserts.
He suggested that the urban middle class in Gujarat had found in
militant religious nationalism a new self-respect and a new virtual
identity as a martial community, in the way in which Bengali babus,
Maharashtrian Brahmins and Kashmiri Muslims at different times have
sought salvation in violence. In Gujarat, he said, this class had smelt
blood for it did not have to do the killings but could plan, finance
and coordinate them with impunity. The middle class, he said,
controlled the media and education, which had become hate factories in
recent times.
Read as a whole, the article has to be considered as an appeal for
introspection so that ultimately Gujarat's traditions of peace and
tolerance triumph over what he called the culture of the State's urban
middle class.
But the article's reformist objective did not register on the State's
thought police. The National Council for Civil Liberties (NCCL),
Ahmedabad, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), which is apparently
in pursuit of goals not in keeping with what its name proclaims, found
the article objectionable under the law. In his complaint to the
Satellite Police Station, NCCL president V.K. Saxena alleged that Nandy
committed the offence that came under Section 153A and 153B of the
Indian Penal Code (IPC). Section 153A deals with the offence of
promoting enmity between different groups on the grounds of religion,
race, place of birth, residence, language, and so on, and doing acts
prejudicial to maintenance of harmony. Section 153B deals with
imputations and assertions prejudicial to national integration.
A sample of sentences in the article which Saxena mentioned in his
complaint as constituting the above offences is as follows:
The Hindus and the Muslims of the State once bonded so
conspicuously by language, culture and commerce have met the
demands
of both V.D. Savarkar and M.A. Jinnah. They now face each other as two
hostile nations.
Gujarat has already disowned the Indian Constitution and the State
apparatus has adjusted to the change.
The actual killers are the lowest of the low, mostly tribals and
Dalits... And they receive spirited support from most non-resident
Indians who, at a safe distance from India, can afford to be more
nationalist, bloodthirsty, and irresponsible.
Considering the gravity of these offences, the lawmakers have provided
for certain safeguards against the misuse of the IPC provisions by
individual complainants against well-intentioned citizens. Thus,
Section 196(1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) provides that
no court shall take cognisance of these offences except with the
previous sanction of the Central government or of the State government.
The Gujarat High Court had held in a case in 1981 that the government,
being an independent party not connected with the dispute between a
complainant and the accused, was expected to act fairly and to make an
objective decision in the matter whenever it was called upon to grant
sanction under Section 196(1).
On April 15, the State government accorded sanction under Section
196(1), which helped Saxena to file his complaint with the police.
To understand how the State government accorded sanction without
application of mind to the facts of the case, the object of Section
196(1) CrPC must be first spelt out. This section aims to prevent
unauthorised persons from intruding in matters of state by instituting
prosecutions and to secure that such prosecutions, for reasons of
policy, shall only be instituted under the authority of the government.
It was envisaged that an article may deal with social reform without
intending to outrage the religious feelings of any class of citizens.
In such a case, if the government is of the opinion that the author of
the article has objectively attacked certain phenomenon or dogmas with
a view to bringing about social reform, the government may refuse
sanction, to avoid restricting the freedom of expression.
But neither the complainant nor the State government appears to have
noted the following sentence in the article, which explains its whole
thrust. Nandy wrote:
"Is there life after Modi? Is it possible to look beyond the 35 years
of rioting that began in 1969 and ended in 2002? Prima facie, the
answer is "no". We can only wait for a new generation that will, out of
sheer self-interest and tiredness, learn to live with each other. In
the meanwhile, we have to wait patiently but not passively to keep
values alive, hoping that at some point will come a modicum of remorse
and a search for atonement and that ultimately Gujarati traditions will
triumph over the culture of the State's urban middle class."
Neither the legal notice issued by Saxena to Nandy, nor the FIR
registered by the Satellite Police Station, refer to this crucial
paragraph in the article which only proves that Nandy's intentions were
impeccable.
In Manzar Sayeed Khan vs. State of Maharashtra, a case dealing with the
police action taken against the author (James Laine) and publishers of
the book Shivaji under Section 153A IPC, the Supreme Court said on
April 5, 2007, that for the purpose of Sec. 153A, "the matter
complained of must be read as a whole. One cannot rely on strongly
worded and isolated passages for proving the charge nor indeed can one
take a sentence here and a sentence there and connect them by a
meticulous process of inferential reasoning."
In this case, the Supreme Court not only restrained the Maharashtra
government from proceeding against Laine and the publishers of his
book, but observed: "It is the sole responsibility of the State to make
positive efforts to resolve every possible conflict between any of the
communities, castes or religions within the State and try every
possible way to establish peace and harmony within the State under
every and all circumstances."
It will be useful to understand the origins of Section 153A. The
section was part of the IPC when it was originally enacted in 1860.
Although it was enacted by the British during colonial rule, it was not
inspired by any antipathy towards free speech. As Soli Sorabjee
observes in an article, the rationale underlying this provision is the
maintenance of public peace and tranquillity in a country where
religious passions can be aroused easily.
In 1886, a Select Committee was appointed to submit a report in
connection with the enactment of Section 295A in the IPC, which
punishes insult to religion. A member of this committee, P. Ananda
Charlu, described the enactment of Section 153A "as a dangerous piece
of legislation and has been impolitic (among other reasons) by
necessitating government to side with or to appear to side with one
party as against another. In my humble judgment, it will only
accentuate the evil which it is meant to remove. Far from healing the
differences which still linger, or which now and then come to the
surface, it would widen the gap by encouraging insidious men to do
mischief in stealth...."
Charlu's objection was not only perceptive but prophetic. Provisions
such as Sections 153A and 153B IPC (which was inserted in 1972)
prohibiting hate speech and expression have over the years led to a
disturbing degree of intolerance and unreasonable interference with the
freedom of expression. That is why powers given to a government under
Section 196 of the CrPC to prevent their abuse must be objectively and
transparently exercised. The Nandy case raises serious questions on
whether the political executive, entrusted with this responsibility,
can be trusted to ensure high standards of objectivity and transparency
while exercising its powers.
http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories/20080801251504400.htm
Copyright © 2008, Frontline.