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Bengaluru Civil Court’s Gag Order

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April 03, 2019

Why in news?

Tejasvi Surya, the BJP’s MP candidate from South Bangalore, has got a temporary order from a Bengaluru court against reporting “defamatory” news about him.

What is the court's order?

  • The court order bars 49 media outlets from publishing “false, malicious and derogatory” news about Mr. Surya.
  • Significantly, these included English and Kannada newspapers and TV stations as well as social media giants like Facebook and Google.
  • The court issued the temporary injunction under Order 39 of the Civil Procedure Code.
  • Based on the order of the city civil judge, Mr. Surya’s advocates issued notices to the media.
  • They were instructed to not publish any scandalous and defamatory statements or any fake news against Tejasvi Surya.

What is the court's rationale?

  • Surya had approached the city civil and sessions court after “me too” tweets and messages related to him emerged on social media.
  • A copy of a Twitter publication that is called ‘Me too case against Tejaswi Surya’ was produced before the court.
  • Based on this, the court order took note of two factors in granting Mr. Surya’s request for an injunction:
  1. some allegations against him surfaced after he filed his nomination papers
  2. “some defamatory messages” against him “are in transit” in the media

Why is the order disputed?

  • Freedom of speech - The Bengaluru civil court’s blanket order is contrary to the law and the Constitution.
  • The gag order obtained by the Lok Sabha candidate violates the basic principle in free speech law.
  • The law on free speech bars ‘prior restraint’ or pre-censorship of any publication, including the media.
  • In R. Rajagopal case (1994), the Supreme Court noted that there is no law that authorises prior restraint.
  • Recently, in 2017, the Court made it clear that pre-broadcast or pre-publication regulation of content was not in the court’s domain.
  • Rationale - The existence of a prima facie case is a precondition for an interim injunction to prevent further publication.
  • Also, a restraining order may be obtained only if some material deemed defamatory has been published.
  • In the present case, only a twitter publication was cited.
  • So grouping the print and electronic media outlets along with the above fails the test of law.
  • Notably, these had not previously disseminated anything defamatory about the individual.
  • Moreover, the judge cited a 1986 Karnataka High Court decision in this regard.
  • But the High Court’s justification for an injunction concerned a particular individual who had made defamatory comments.
  • In contrast, in this case, the restriction is issued against a class of persons, the media outlets.
  • Election - The allegations that have aggrieved Mr. Surya seem to originate in an individual’s opinion on him on Twitter.
  • It is possible that this piece of information was or is likely to be used against him by his electoral rivals.
  • However, this cannot be a reason for a public figure of a major political party to claim a right to gag the entire media from writing about him.
  • The order may be used to prevent the media from writing anything adverse to his campaign.
  • It may also prevent defendants in a future proceeding from using ‘publication of the truth in the public interest’ as a defence.
  • Requests for restraint orders against media outlets seem to find favour with some civil judges in Karnataka.
  • The Karnataka High Court or the Supreme Court must examine this trend and strike down such blanket gag orders.

 

Source: Indian Express, The Hindu

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