19 September 2016 – An inefficient
legal system and what amounts to unchecked abuse of vague and overbroad
legislation have contributed to a chilling effect on free speech within India’s
society and throughout its public sphere according to a report released today
by PEN International, PEN Canada and International Human Rights Program (IHRP) at the University of
Toronto’s Faculty of Law. The report, Fearful Silence: The Chill on
India’s Public Sphere, demonstrates how a relatively small
number of aggrieved citizens can successfully deter many others from speaking
out on sensitive issues, thereby endangering India’s key democratic freedoms.
The report is an update to PEN’s 2015
report, Imposing Silence: The Use of India’s Laws to Suppress Free Speech,which detailed ways
in which intolerant individuals and groups have used vaguely worded laws and a
cumbersome legal system to silence their opponents. A year on, the update
paints a sobering picture for the state of free expression in India today,
revealing that a growing culture of intolerance linked to a rising nationalist
discourse has taken root in the country and has become more menacing since
Narendra Modi became Prime Minister in 2014, creating an atmosphere in which
‘vigilantism has been given an implicit go-ahead’.
‘Fighting for justice is
anti-national, fighting for minorities is anti-national, raising issues of
inadequate jurisprudence by the Supreme Court is anti-national, so basically
any questioning is anti-national,’ said leading human rights defender
and journalist Teesta Setalvad of the rise in nationalist rhetoric and its use
to suppress free speech.
The report, which is the result of interviews conducted with
authors, activists, journalists, film-makers and lawyers in Jaipur, Hubli and
Delhi earlier this year, focuses on cases of film censorship, intimidation of
writers and journalists, the arbitrary use of the law and online harassment.
Although freedom of expression is protected under the Indian Constitution and
international treaties to which India is a State Party, antiquated laws passed
during the colonial era, such as sedition, and laws criminalising defamation
and those pertaining to hate speech are used to restrict freedom of expression.
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Since the publication of Imposing Silence, such laws and provisions have
consistently been used to target individuals and groups. In February 2016, for
example, police arrested Kanhaiya Kumar, President of Jawaharlal Nehru
University Student Union, on charges of sedition, for allegedly shouting
‘anti-national slogans’ at a rally to commemorate the anniversary of the
execution of a Kashmiri separatist. Four days after his arrest, Kumar and
several journalists who were covering his trial were assaulted by a group that
included lawyers and a Member of Parliament belonging to the country’s ruling
party.
‘The message is clear: Violence
in the name of ultra-nationalism is acceptable. Not even the courts are safe
spaces. Challenge the state, or the B.J.P., at your peril.’ – Nilanjana
Roy, author and member of PEN Delhi.
The space for free speech in India’s public sphere is shrinking.
A climate of online harassment threatens to silence critical voices,
particularly those of minorities and women. Proposed changes to the Information
Technology Act, incorporating overbroad provisions of the penal code, threaten
online speech. A culture of self-censorship born out of the fear of reprisals
is growing, and vexatious and groundless trials against authors, journalists,
and artists are eroding the principle of free speech. The report concludes with
a set of recommendations for urgent reform to prevent further abuses and a call
for the protection of free expression in the world’s largest democracy.
For press queries please contact:
Evan Rankin at IHRP and International
Human Rights Program (IHRP) at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Law:evan.rankin@mail.utoronto.ca
Brendan de Caires at PEN Canada | bdecaires@pencanada.ca | 416 703 8448 x 21
Sahar Halaimzai at PEN International: Sahar.halaimzai@pen-international.org | +44 (0)20 7405 0338
Brendan de Caires at PEN Canada | bdecaires@pencanada.ca | 416 703 8448 x 21
Sahar Halaimzai at PEN International: Sahar.halaimzai@pen-international.org | +44 (0)20 7405 0338
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