Issues and Analysis on Sedition Law for UPSC Civil Services Examination (General Studies) Preparation

Fundamental Rights

Indian Polity

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    Sedition Law

    Introduction:

    ‘Sedition’ is an offence incorporated into the Indian Penal Code (IPC) in 1870Section 124A of the IPC defines sedition and says:

    • whoever by words either spoken or written or by signs or by visible representation or otherwise brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, the government established by law; or
    • whoever by the above means excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the government established by law, has committed the offence of sedition.

    The offence is punishable with imprisonment for life.

    Body:

    Recently Supreme Court (SC) judge Justice Deepak Gupta, remarked that the time had come to reconsider the law of sedition. Highlighting a number of recent examples, he observed that the law of sedition “is more often abused and misused”, and that “freedom of expression being a constitutional right must get primacy over the laws of sedition”.

    Dark side of Sedition Law:

    • Before Independence, this charge was used by the British to suppress the freedom movement.
    • Ironically, the same draconian law has become a tool that the country is now using against its own people.
    • During colonial period section 124-A was interpreted by the privy council in a way to suppress every act that expressed discontent against the government.
    • Many freedom fighters were slapped with these charges for invoking feelings of nationalism and educating people of India against the policies adopted by the colonial power.

    Why Sedition law must be stripped off?

    • Draconian laws such as the Section 124-A only serve to give a legal veneer to the regime’s persecution of voices and movements against oppression by casting them as anti-national.
    • Figures of the National Crime Records Bureau reveal that in the two years preceding the JNU case, there were a total of 77 sedition cases.
    • Dissent is the lifeblood of democracy. Democracy has no meaning without freedoms and sedition as interpreted and applied by the police and governments is a negation of it.
    • Terms like “disaffection” and “contempt” can be stretched to mean just about anything, enabling
    • Beyond the high-profile urban cases, the reach of Section 124-A has extended even to faraway places. An entire village in Kudankulam, Tamil Nadu had sedition cases slapped against it for resisting a nuclear power project. Adivasis of Jharkhand, resisting displacement, topped the list of those slapped with sedition in 2014.
    • Instead of critically analysing why citizens, be they in Kashmir or Chhattisgarh or Bhima Koregaon, are driven to dissent, the government is using an iron-fist policy with the sedition law playing a leading role to completely shut out contrarian views.
    • Hence, before the law loses its potency, the Supreme Court, being the protector of the fundamental rights of the citizens has to step in and evaluate the law and may declare Section 124A unconstitutional if necessary.
    • As events have shown, however, the gap between the law and its judicial interpretation has become so wide that there can be no interpretive bridge that will adequately protect liberty.
    • This being the case, the Supreme Court will, hopefully, reconsider its 1962 decision, and strike down the law of sedition as being unconstitutional.

    Way Forward:

    • All speech-related offences should be made bailable offences; this would lessen the harmful impact of using arrest and custody as a way of harassing anyone exercising their rights under Article 19(1) (a). The chilling effect on freedom of speech and expression must be erased.
    • Forming a committee involving Government and renowned civil society members while deciding cases under section 124 A.
    • To limit the discretionary power as much as possible through better and comprehensive drafting of guidelines.
    • The offences should be made non-cognisable so that there is at least a judicial check on the police acting on the basis of politically motivated complaints.
    • In the case of offences under Sections 153A (“promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc, and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony”) and 295A of the Indian Penal Code, it is mandatory under Section 196(1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure to obtain prior sanction of the government before taking cognisance of the offences. This needs to be extended to the offence of sedition under Section 124A.
    • In the case of hate speech, it is important to raise the burden of proof on those who claim that their sentiments are hurt rather than accept them at face value.
    • And finally, it is crucial that courts begin to take action against those who bring malicious complaints against speech acts.

    Conclusion:

    The word ‘sedition’ is thus extremely nuanced, and needs to be applied with caution. It is like cannon that ought not be used to shoot a mouse; but the arsenal also demands possession of cannons, mostly as a deterrent, and on occasion for shooting.

     

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