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Section 124A - Vaiko Case 

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July 10, 2019

What is the issue?

  • Politician Vaiko from Tamil Nadu has been convicted of sedition .
  • With this, the case for scrapping Section 124A of IPC has come to the fore again.

What is the charge against him?

  • The sedition charge is based on his pro-LTTE speech that he had made a decade ago.

  • Mr. Vaiko had unleashed a verbal attack against the Union government by accusing it of betraying the Sri Lankan Tamil cause. 

  • He held it responsible for the death of Tamil civilians there. 

  • However, whether his harshly worded indictment amounts to incitement of violence against the government is debatable. 

  • The trial court sentenced Mr.Vaiko to one-year jail term. 

What is the court verdict?

  • The court has held that anyone who heard Mr. Vaiko’s speech would develop hatred towards the government.

  • It also said that “mere advocacy” is the essence of the crime, and there need not be actual violence as a consequence. 

  • But, the higher courts will have the final say on whether he was guilty.

What are the matters of concern?

  • The political speeches being criminalised to the point of being deemed an offence against the state is the concern. 

  • Further, the timing of a political leader being found guilty of sedition is quite inopportune. 

  • This conviction will send out a misleading message that such provisions are necessary to protect the government. 

What is the problem with Section 124A?

  • Its definition of sedition is too wide. 

  • In 1962, the Supreme Court limited its scope to acts that show actual intent or a tendency to create disorder or foment violence. 

  • There is an opinion that it is neither relevant nor needed today. 

  • Law Commission’s consultation paper -  Highlights arguments for its reconsideration. 

  • There is a body of opinion that a modern democracy does not need a free speech restriction based on political concepts towards the state. 

  • Britain, which introduced the offence of sedition in India in 1870 has abolished it. 

 

Source: The Hindu

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