TOPIC – Overdue reviewIt is gratifying to note that the Supreme Court, while indicating its intention to reconsider the sedition provision in the IPC, has raised the question most relevant to the issue: “Why does Section 124A continue in the statute book even after 75 years of independence?” The Chief Justice of India, N.V. Ramana, has also pointed to its
rampant misuse by the police across the country, and reminded the Government that it was a legal provision that the colonial regime had used to suppress the freedom movement. The issues flagged by the CJI may set the tone for what would be a comprehensive reconsideration of a section that has been frequently and wrongfully used, especially in the last few years, to suppress
dissent, criminalize
strident political criticism and taint opponents with the tag of being ‘antinational’. Even though it is often argued that the misuse of a law alone does not render it invalid, there is a special case to strike down Section 124A because of its inherent potential for misuse. There is a pattern of behavior Among all regimes that indicate a
proclivity to invoke it without examining its applicability to the facts of any case. Recent cases show that sedition is used for three political reasons: to suppress criticism and protests against particular policies and projects of the government, to criminalize dissenting opinion from rights defenders, lawyers, activists and journalists, and to settle political scores, sometimes with communal hues. It is not to be forgotten that the section was upheld in 1962 by a Constitution Bench mainly by reading down the import of the terms “bring into hatred or contempt”, or “to create
disaffection towards the government established by law” and limit its scope to only those instances of speech or writing that show a
pernicious Tendency to create public disorder. Without this
attenuated interpretation, the restriction imposed on free speech by Section 124A would have been declared unconstitutional. The Court is now seized of several cases that seek a reconsideration of the 1962 verdict, citing more recent judgments expanding the scope of fundamental rights and doctrines that have been subsequently evolved. In particular, the “chilling effect” that a law may have on free speech and the vague and ‘overbroad’ definition of sedition that renders both
provocative and
innocuous speeches and writings equally liable for prosecution points to be examined. In 2016, the Government itself admitted in Parliament that the definition of sedition is too wide and requires reconsideration. The Law Commission’s consultation paper in 2018 had said: “In a democracy, singing from the same songbook is not a benchmark of
patriotism… People should be at liberty to show their affection towards their country in their own way.” While issuing fresh guidelines and safeguards is one way of
quelling the potential for its misuse, it will be more helpful if Section 124A is struck down altogether.
The Hindu Editorial Words with meanings, synonyms, and antonyms
Rampant (adjective) – Unrestrained and violent
Synonyms – Widespread, unbridled, riotous, exuberant, frantic
Antonyms – Blighted, bland, sparse, benign, scarce
Dissent (noun) – A difference of opinion
Synonyms – Dissension, discord, demur, strife, heresy
Antonyms – Acquiesce, consensus, accede, ratify, certainty
Strident (adjective) – Being sharply insistent on being heard
Synonyms – Shrill, raucous, grating, clamorous, blatant
Antonyms – Melodious, muffled, feeble, hushed, stifled
Proclivity (noun) – A natural inclination
Synonyms – Bent, predilection, penchant, proneness, prejudice
Antonyms – Aversion, repulsion, antipathy, scunner, abhorrence
Disaffection (noun) – Disloyalty to the government
Synonyms – Estrangement, alienation, breach, rupture, schism
Antonyms – Constancy, endearment, fidelity, alchemy, ardor
Pernicious (adjective) – Exceedingly harmful
Synonyms – Baneful, deleterious, detrimental, pestilent, noxious
Antonyms – Salubrious, anodyne, curative, invigorating, rejuvenating
Attenuated (adjective) – Made thin or slender
Synonyms – Tenuous, emaciated, extenuated, rarefied, spindly
Antonyms – Blubbery, beefy, podgy, buxom, corpulent
Provocative (adjective) – Exciting
Synonyms – Incendiary, titillating, arousing, erotic, coquettish
Antonyms – Jejune, conciliatory, awful, dreary, insipid
Innocuous (adjective) – Harmless
Synonyms – Benign, tame, inane, vapid, unmalicious
Antonyms – Obnoxious, detrimental, wicked, pernicious, malignant
Patriotism (noun) – Love of country and willingness to sacrifice for it
Synonyms – Chauvinism, fealty, civism, isolationism, staunchness
Antonyms – Treachery, rebellion, desertion, treason, defection
Quelling (noun) – Forceful prevention
Synonyms – Stifling, subduing, quenching, allaying, squelch
Antonyms – begetting, elating, emboldening, filliping, bucking up