Cartoonist Aseem Trivedi released from Mumbai jail

September 12, 2012

Aseem_walks_out_of_jail

 

Mumbai, September 12:  Aseem Trivedi, the cartoonist jailed on charges of sedition, has left a Mumbai jail. He emerged waving his fist in the air, wearing a button-down black shirt just like when he was taken into custody on Saturday.  He was granted bail last evening by the Bombay High Court.

Mr Trivedi headed first to a shrine for BR Ambedkar, down the road from the Arthur Road jail. "Even Gandhi and Nehru have been charged with sedition. Were they not patriotic? We have no politics. The entire country will now fight against the law on sedition. I will cooperate in all court cases," he told reporters there. A press conference is scheduled for later in the afternoon.  

The weekend arrest of the 25-year-old freelance cartoonist and anti-corruption campaigner sparked a domestic and international backlash against the government, which was accused by critics of using the colonial-era sedition law to crush dissent.   

Mr Trivedi's friends say he was targeted by the government because he is a member of India Against Corruption, the movement led by activists Anna Hazare and Arvind Kejriwal.  His arrest was based on a complaint filed by a lawyer who said Mr Trivedi's cartoons lampooning corruption were offensive and disrespectful of national emblems and the constitution.

Mr Trivedi had originally refused to accept bail, stating he wanted the sedition charges against him to be dropped, but his associates later said that he plans to leave jail and campaign against an archaic sedition law.  The High Court will decide on September 14 whether the controversial charges should be removed. The Maharashtra government is also examining whether the removal of the charges is legally permissible.

Media rights group Reporters Without Borders was among those calling for the immediate release of Trivedi, one of whose cartoons depicted the national parliament as a huge toilet bowl. Another replaced the three lions in the national emblem with bloody-mouthed wolves to indicate a country being devoured by graft.


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Agencies
February 25,2020

New Delhi, Feb 25: Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Tuesday called a meeting to discuss the prevailing situation in the national capital after violence in Northeast Delhi over the amended citizenship law left four people dead.

Delhi's Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and representatives of different political parties were invited for the meeting.

Follow live updates of clashes among CAA protesters in Delhi here

The home minister has convened a meeting to discuss the current situation in Delhi, a Home Ministry official said.

The move came after the home minister reviewed the law and order situation in the national capital on Monday night as violence rocked Northeast Delhi.

Frenzied protesters torched houses, shops, vehicles and a petrol pump, besides hurling stones.

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News Network
June 23,2020

New Delhi, Jun 23: The Delhi High Court Tuesday granted bail to Jamia student Safoora Zargar, who is pregnant and was arrested under anti-terror law UAPA in a case related to communal violence in northeast Delhi during protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, as Solicitor General Tushar Mehta did not oppose it on humanitarian grounds.

At the outset of the hearing, Mehta, representing Delhi Police, submitted that Zargar can be released on regular bail on humanitarian grounds and the decision has not been taken on merits of the case and should not be made a precedent.

Justice Rajiv Shakdher, who conducted the hearing through video conferencing, released Zargar, who is 23-week pregnant, on bail on furnishing a personal bond of Rs 10,000 and surety of like amount.

The court said she shall not indulge in any activity for which she has been charged with and shall not hamper the investigation or influence the witnesses.

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Agencies
January 4,2020

New Delhi, Jan 4: "Sovereign, socialist, secular, democratic republic" is how India is referred to in the preamble of the Constitution. However, J Nandakumar, a key RSS leader and All India Convenor Prajna Pravah, a Sangh offshoot, wants India to reconsider the inclusion of the word "secular", claiming secularism is a "western, Semitic concept".

In an exclusive interview to news agency, Nandakumar said: "Secularism is a western, Semitic concept. It came into existence in the West. It was actually against Papal dominance."

He argued that India does not need a secular ethos as the nation has moved "way beyond secularism" since it believes in universal acceptance as against the western concept of tolerance.

The RSS functionary on Thursday released a book here named "Hindutva in the changing times". The book launch event was also attended by senior RSS functionary Krishna Gopal.

Nandakumar, who has attacked the Mamata Banerjee government in his book for alleged "Islamisation of West Bengal", told IANS: "We have to see whether we need to put up a board of being secular, or that whether we should prove this through our behaviour, actions and roles."

It is for society to take a call on this, rather than by any political class, on whether the preamble to the Indian Constitution should continue to have the word "secular" in it or not, he added.

In between signing his books and obliging wannabe Hindutva cadres with selfies, Nandakumar said that the very existence of the word "secular" in the preamble was not necessary and how the constitution founders too were against it.

"Baba Saheb Ambedkar, Ladi Krishnaswamy Aiyaar -- all debated against it and said it (secular) wasn't necessary to be included in the preamble. That time it was demanded, discussed and decided not to include it," he said.

Ambedkar's opinion was, however, disregarded when Indira Gandhi "bulldozed" the word "secular", in 1976, said the head of the Prajna Pravah, an umbrella body of several right-wing think-tanks

As Nandakumar prepared to return to his base in Kerala, where, he emphasises, the RSS has its work cut out in the "fight against the Kunnor model", he said that the inclusion of "secular" was done with the intent to damage the concept of Hindutva.

"It was to demolish, destroy the overarching principle of Hindutva that binds us together", he said.

Asked whether the Sangh would pressurise the BJP, which has 303 seats in the Lok Sabha, to omit "secular" from the Constitution preamble, Nandakumar smilingly refused to reply.

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