[Our written Constitution “guarantees freedom of speech”; applause.
Then after a long pause, he (a retired judge of Malaysia’s Court of
Appeal) added – looking towards his prime minister – “But it does not
guarantee freedom after speech”. Freedom after speech – that is really
what freedom of speech is all about. Never forget this.

Fali S. Nariman - in Yesterday's press conference, at Delhi Press
Club, to protest raids on the NDTV]

I/IV.
http://www.ndtv.com/video/news/news/if-you-crawl-they-will-come-for-you-so-stand-up-prannoy-roy-on-ndtv-raids-459684

If You Crawl, They Will Come For You, So Stand Up: Prannoy Roy on NDTV Raids

PUBLISHED ON: JUNE 9, 2017 | DURATION: 7 MIN, 23 SEC

Video

II/IV.
http://www.jantakareporter.com/india/fali-s-nariman-janta-ka-reporter/129585/

Janta Ka Reporter, links Sambit Patra episode to CBI raids

By JKR Staff - June 9, 2017

Eminent jurist, Fali S Nariman, on Friday slammed the central
government for the CBI raids on the premises owned by the NDTV
founders, Prannoy and Radhika Roy.

fali s nariman janta ka reporter

Nariman, who spoke for nearly half hour, reminded the audience at
Delhi Press Club, to remember the chain of events before the CBI
conducted the raids.

He read verbatim the on-air verbal exchanges between the NDTV anchor
Nidhi Razdan and BJP spokesperson, Sambit Patra.

As reported by Janta Ka Reporter, Razdan had demanded an apology from
Patra after he accused the NDTV of having an agenda. Razdan had later
asked him to leave the show and go to more ‘glorified versions of
Doordarshan’-India’s public service broadcaster.



Nariman on Friday said that the CBI raids taking place just days after
Patra being told to leave the show at NDTV ‘must worry all.’

“But the manner and circumstances and the so-called justification of
the CBI raids give me reason to believe that all this is definitely an
unjustified attack on press and media,” he said.

“We are meeting here to stop future deligitimisatioon of the media,”
he said, adding similar attempts to muzzle the voices of media were
made by the Indira Gandhi government.

Delhi-based journalists gathered at Press Club to protest the CBI
raids against Roy.

The protest, which saw some senior journalists like Kuldeep Nayyar,
Arun Shourie, H K Dua and S Nihal Singh in attendance at the lawns of
the Press Club of India here, came days after the CBI conducted
searches at the residence of Roy here and three other locations for
allegedly causing losses to a private bank.

Also Read:  Gujarat riots had support from the state, It's an era of
Islamophobia: Kanhaiya Kumar
The NDTV had described the actions as a “witch-hunt” based on “same
old” false accusations.

Former Union minister and veteran journalist Arun Shourie alleged that
the government has been controlling the media through two major
instruments — one by “offering bribe” through advertisements and the
other by “subterranean spreading of fear”.



Shourie thanked Prime Minister Narendra Modi for getting ‘so many
friends’ together in protest against the CBI raids.

He said, “Tujh se pahle jo yahan takht nasheen tha, usko bhi khud ke
khuda hone kaa yaqeen tha (The one who was occupying the throne here
before you too had the false notion of being a God just like you).

He warned that the government at the Centre muzzling the free speech
will only intensify in time to come as, according to him, the Modi
government believed in complete domination.

“Now they are using the third instrument, which is overt pressure and
they have made NDTV an example of that. I believe this will intensify
in the coming months,” he said.

Shourie alleged that the government would in future not only resort to
managing but also suppressing the voices of dissent.

“If you (journalists) think that if you give prominence to articles of
some of the ministers in newspapers or give them air time, they will
help you in crisis.

“In fact, when the assault comes on you, none of them will help,” Shourie said.

He said the present government is run by “two and half men”, without
elaborating whom he referred to.

“There is no minister here. The government is of two- and-a-half men,”
he alleged.

“Instead of buying peace with concession, I would urge non
cooperation…just boycott their (government’s) press conferences, deny
them that,” Shourie said.

He told journalists to counter the lies spread by the Centre’s
Narendra Modi government by informing the international media because
it was one of Modi’s weaknesses.

Shourie also said that publicity was the oxygen for the ‘bhagwa
labourers’ and media fraternity ought to have denied that acces to
that oxygen.

Veteran journalist Kuldeep Nayyar urged journalists to rise to the
occasion in this battle for independent media.

“We cannot and should not allow anybody to muzzle the voice of media.
We are facing more or less the same situation as in the Emergency,” he
said.

Also Read:  Police arrest five men accused of raping minor in Jammu
Roy, who was the last speaker, said that the Modi government was
trying to suppress our freedom even when we were not doing any thing
wrong.

He said that the worry was the they were out there to ‘fix you’ even
when you were innocent.

They’ve accused of carrying out prostitution racket inside income tax
departments.

Addressing the gathering, Roy said, “I commit here today that we will
answer all the charges openly and transparently.

What all I ask is to please make it a time-bound process.” Members of
the Press Club of India, the Federation of Press Clubs of India, Delhi
Union of Journalists, the Press Association, the Foreign
Correspondents Club, the Indian Women’s Press Corps and the Editors
Guild of India were also present.

The NDTV founder, also said, their fight was not against the CBI or
the ED, but against politicians, who, he alleged, want to “eviscerate
these institutions”.

“Please don’t believe there cannot be smoke without fire.

Politicians can make smoke without fire,” he said.

Members of the Press Club of India, the Federation of Press Clubs of
India, Delhi Union of Journalists, the Press Association, the Foreign
Correspondents Club, the Indian Women’s Press Corps and the Editors
Guild of India were also present.

(With additional inputs from agencies)

III/IV.
http://indianexpress.com/article/india/cbi-raids-on-ndtv-promoters-journalists-claim-emergency-like-situation-4696674/

CBI raids on NDTV promoters: Journalists claim ‘Emergency-like situation’
The NDTV had described the actions as a "witch-hunt" based on "same
old" false accusations.

By: PTI | New Delhi | Published:June 9, 2017 9:47 pm

Several senior journalists on Friday came together to protest against
an “Emergency-like situation” which they alleged was due to “attempts
to muzzle the voices” of media with NDTV founder Prannoy Roy demanding
that issues involving his channel be resolved in time-bound manner.

The protest, which saw some senior journalists like Kuldeep Nayyar,
Arun Shourie, H K Dua and S Nihal Singh in attendance at the lawns of
the Press Club of India here, came days after the CBI conducted
searches at the residence of Roy here and three other locations for
allegedly causing losses to a private bank.

The NDTV had described the actions as a “witch-hunt” based on “same
old” false accusations.

Former Union minister and veteran journalist Shourie alleged that the
government has been controlling the media through two major
instruments — one by “offering bribe” through advertisements and the
other by “subterranean spreading of fear”.

“Now they are using the third instrument, which is overt pressure and
they have made NDTV an example of that. I believe this will intensify
in the coming months,” he said.
Shourie alleged that the government would in future not only resort to
managing but also suppressing the voices of dissent.

“If you (journalists) think that if you give prominence to articles of
some of the ministers in newspapers or give them air time, they will
help you in crisis.

“In fact, when the assault comes on you, none of them will help,” Shourie said.

He said the present government is run by “two and half men”, without
elaborating whom he referred to. “There is no minister here. The
government is of two-and-a-half men,” he alleged.

“Instead of buying peace with concession, I would urge non
cooperation…just boycott their (government’s) press conferences, deny
them that,” Shourie said.

Eminent jurist Fali S Nariman said no one is immune to being
prosecuted from criminal offence. “But the manner and circumstances
and the so-called justification of the CBI raids give me reason to
believe that all this is definitely an unjustified attack on press and
media,” he said.

“We are meeting here to stop future deligitimisatioon of the media,”
he said, adding similar attempts to muzzle the voices of media were
made by the Indira Gandhi government.

Veteran journalist Kuldeep Nayyar urged journalists to rise to the
occasion in this battle for independent media. “We cannot and should
not allow anybody to muzzle the voice of media. We are facing more or
less the same situation as in the Emergency,” he said.

Addressing the gathering, Roy said, “I commit here today that we will
answer all the charges openly and transparently. What all I ask is to
please make it a time-bound process.”

Members of the Press Club of India, the Federation of Press Clubs of
India, Delhi Union of Journalists, the Press Association, the Foreign
Correspondents Club, the Indian Women’s Press Corps and the Editors
Guild of India were also present.

IV.
https://scroll.in/article/840206/full-text-fali-nariman-explains-why-the-cbi-raid-on-ndtv-was-an-attack-on-press-freedom

PRESS FREEDOM

Full text: Fali Nariman explains why the CBI raid on NDTV was an
attack on press freedom
The eminent lawyer was speaking at an event organised to condemn the
CBI raids on NDTV.

Yesterday · 09:59 pm

Fali S Nariman

Noted lawyer Fali S Nariman on Friday criticised the Central Bureau of
Investigation raids and FIR against the NDTV news channel on Monday,
saying that the “manner and circumstances” of the raids, and the
agency’s so-called justification of it “give me reason to believe that
all this...[is]...definitely an unjustified attack on press/media
freedom”.

Nariman was speaking before a packed gathering at an event organised
at the Press Club of India, in Delhi, to express support for the
television channel. The raid the home and premises associated with
NDTV co-founder Prannoy Roy had been carried out in connection with an
alleged loss of Rs 48 crore on a loan NDTV had taken from ICICI Bank.

“We citizens in India enjoy freedoms that are not enjoyed in most
places in the continent of Asia,” he said. “We are meeting here to
prevent further de-legitimisation of the media by condemning the
unexplained raid on NDTV.”

Nariman recalled that in the past, single-party majoritarian
governments of the kind India has now have also attacked the press,
citing Indira Gandhi as an example.

The constitutional expert acknowledged that no one was immune from
being prosecuted for a criminal offence but asked why the CBI had
filed an FIR directly on the basis of information supplied by a
private individual regarding events that are said to have taken place
nearly eight years ago.

He drew attention to the fact that the CBI action against the channel
took place days after an NDTV anchor asked Bharatiya Janata Party
spokesperson Sambit Patra to apologise or leave a show she was
hosting, after Patra claimed that the channel had an agenda.

Here is the full text of his speech:

Play
I come here on invitation to say a few words to you not only because I
fervently believe in our constitutionally guaranteed press/media
freedom, but more importantly and more significantly because I also
believe in the independence, integrity and honesty of Prannoy Roy of
NDTV – a friend of more than 30 years – on whose invitation I attend
this meeting.

As to the topic – press freedom – we are here speaking amongst the
already converted. We citizens in India enjoy freedoms that are not
enjoyed in most places in the continent of Asia.

Eminent jurist Fali Nariman on raids on NDTV

Watch LIVE: NDTV raids and press freedom discussed now by Press Club
of India pic.twitter.com/29xx3lo7p8

— NDTV (@ndtv) June 9, 2017
I did not realise this until a few years ago when my wife and I
attended the Commonwealth Law Conference in Kuala Lumpur: one of the
delegates was a retired judge of Malaysia’s Court of Appeal and he
told a crowded hall of over 1,000 delegates in the presence of the
then prime minister, Mr Mahatir, who as you know was not exactly a
liberal.

The retired judge said in a loud voice: Our written Constitution
“guarantees freedom of speech”; applause. Then after a long pause, he
added – looking towards his prime minister – “But it does not
guarantee freedom after speech”. Freedom after speech – that is really
what freedom of speech is all about. Never forget this.

Let me make one thing clear. No one is immune from being prosecuted
for a criminal offence – not any of you, not I, not Prannoy Roy, not
NDTV.

But the manner and circumstances and the so-called justification of
the CBI raids on NDTV (much publicised thereafter) do give me reason
to believe that all this (the raids and the FIR filed by the CBI) are
definitely an unjustified attack on press/media freedom.

Let me tell you why.

On June 2, 2017, a first information report was lodged by the CBI
alleging criminal conspiracy, cheating and criminal misconduct on the
part of NDTV, Prannoy Roy and his wife Radhika Roy, and unknown
officials of ICICI Bank about something that took place during the
financial year 2008-2009.

The FIR was lodged by the CBI in the CBI court on the basis not of any
discovery by the CBI on its own but only on the basis of information
supplied by one Sanjay Dutt, director, Quantum Securities Private
Limited, to the director, CBI, in his letter of complaint dated
28-04-2017 (marked confidential).

Although the criminal misconduct was said to have occurred in the year
2008-2009 – as to why it was not brought to light earlier was neither
mentioned nor explained in the complaint letter of April 28, 2017
addressed by Sanjay Dutt to the CBI. Not did the CBI bother to find
out why something that happened in the year 2008-2009 was not brought
to the notice of the CBI court or of any other criminal court or any
other person before 28-04-2017.

The entire FIR filed by the CBI before the CBI court is based only on
information supplied in the complaint of Sanjay Dutt dated 28-04-2017.

What is of great significance is that prior to filing his complaint
with the CBI by letter dated April 28, 2017, (or thereafter) Sanjay
Dutt (although he had sent 200 emails to NDTV on various matters) had
not addressed any communication to NDTV making the specific
allegations mentioned in his complaint to the CBI, nor does he explain
why he did not file an FIR in a criminal court himself alleging
breaches of the criminal law on the part of NDTV.

I do not know whether on any other occasion the CBI has filed an FIR
directly on the basis of information supplied in a private complaint
addressed to it without the complainant being required to make his
case before a criminal court – this must be inquired into.

But more importantly, on receiving such a complaint, what is the
obligation of a reputed investigative agency of the state set up by
law such as the CBI?

Obviously, to my mind, the first thing it (CBI) would do, in fairness,
would be to ask the persons against whom allegations are made, viz.
NDTV and ICICI Bank, as to what they have to say in the matter –
particularly since the allegations now made in 2017 are in respect of
events of the year 2008-2009.

But no such inquiry was made by the CBI before conducting the raids on
5-6-2017 or before filing the FIR on 2-6-2017 – not a single letter of
CBI to NDTV with regard to the allegations made in Sanjay Dutt’s
letter of 28-04-2017.

My legal submission is that in the case of an allegation by any
government or governmental agency, including the CBI, of wrongdoing
against the press or the media (who enjoy constitutionally guaranteed
press freedom)

Whenever the CBI files a criminal complaint (an FIR) not of its own
but only on the basis of information supplied by a third party, it
must in furtherance of press freedom guaranteed under Article 19 (1)
(a) inquire from the owners/promoters of the company running the press
or the media concerned what it has to say in the matter before
conducting raids on its premises and on the premises of those in
charge of the press or media and before filing a criminal complaint on
the basis of such information. This it must do, not as a matter of
courtesy or favour, but as a matter of constitutional obligation.

In the present case, Prannoy Roy assures me that he and NDTV have a
complete answer to each and every statement made in the letter of
April 28, 2017 (headed “confidential and privileged”) addressed by
Sanjay Dutt to the CBI and which is a letter reproduced in full in the
FIR filed by the CBI on June 2, 2017, and that he, Prannoy Roy, has
never had an opportunity to deal with its contents.

However, this is not the place or occasion to debate whether NDTV has
or has not committed any offence as alleged in the complaint letter
dated April 28, 2017, of Sanjay Dutt to the CBI.

Eminent jurist Fali Nariman on raids on NDTV

Watch LIVE: https://t.co/hMlRpgrUU6 pic.twitter.com/5kM09OK0yb

— NDTV (@ndtv) June 9, 2017
But the events preceding the later much-publicised raids on NDTV are
the most significant:

On June 1, 2017, on a television programme of NDTV, when Sanjoy
Hazarika was speaking and the official BJP spokesperson Mr Sambit
Patra interrupted him and Sanjoy Hazarika asked whether Sambit Patra
had the right to interrupt, the response by Sambit Patra was: “I
interrupt people only on NDTV and I do that because NDTV has an agenda
and I need to do that.”
At this, the anchor asked Mr Patra to leave or apologise.
Mr Patra: “Why should I leave? I will expose the NDTV agenda. I should
expose you and your TV’s agenda.”
The anchor replied that to use such language and make that kind of an
accussation was unacceptable.
But Mr Patra persisted and said “I will expose it till the end of this
debate”, at which the anchor said, “I am not continuing this debate
with you any longer.”
It was after BJP spokesman Mr Patra’s accusation on live TV on June 1,
2017, that the CBI raids took place on June 5, 2017 at Prannoy Roy’s
residence in Delhi, at his home in Dehradun and Mussourie and at the
NDTV office in Delhi and Financial and Accounts offices of NDTV.
I urge you to consider these events and their sequence – they must
worry you as they have worried me.

Pratap Bhanu Mehta in an article in The Indian Express shortly after
these raids, two days ago, said:

“Once the press called all politicians cheats, the political class
simply turned the tables on them by calling them all “presstitutes”.
Remember, as civil society did, all the state had to do was sow the
seeds of doubt. The result was an almost wholescale delegetimisation
of the media.”

We are meeting here to prevent further de-legitimisation of the media
by condemning the unexplained raid on NDTV and filing of an FIR by the
CBI on the basis solely of information given a complaint dated April
28, 2017, by Sanjay Dutt, Director, Quantum Securities Pvt Ltd in a
confidential and privileged communication to the CBI as to events that
are said to have taken place in 2008-2009 on the basis of which CBI
had filed an FIR before the CBI court on 2.6.2017 for adjudication –
admittedly without ascertaining from NDTV the truth or otherwise of
the facts alleged in the complaint letter dated 28.04.2007.

But all this pertains to the NDTV case.

When there is a single-party majoritarian government as there is in
the present time and the present day (as there was it must be
remembered in the years when Mrs Indira Gandhi was prime minister and
for a while when Mr Rajiv Gandhi was also prime minister), a similar
situation had prevailed and there were similar attacks on the freedom
of the press.

The press and the media supported by an independent judiciary are the
only safeguards to an open democracy.

But then question is, what has this got to do with all the other
channels and the press generally – leave it all, NDTV can suffer if
they want to?

[This] is the sort of query to which one of the most effective answers
was given long ago.

It was in a poem written by German priest Martin Niemoller (1892-1984)
and it was about the cowardice of German intellectuals following the
Nazis rise to power and subsequent purging of chosen targets group by
group. This poem is now enshrined in the Holocaust Memorial Museum in
New York:

First they came for the Communists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Communist
Then they came for the trade unionists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a trade unionist
Then they came for the Jews
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Jew
Then they came for me
And there was no one left
To speak out for me.

NDTV apart, we may contemplate today whether the blessings of a Free
Press are really worthwhile?

There are several views on this, but those I like best are the following:

First the sophisticated one, given by our own Supreme Court way back
in 1950 – the year of the birth of our Constitution (when electronic
media was not thought of) – Justice Patanjali Sastri, for five
Justices: himself and Chief Justices Kania and Justice Mahajan, BK
Mukherjee and Das in a Constitution Bench decision in Romesh Thapar
case spoke eloquently about the right of free speech and expression in
our Constitution and then added:

  “A freedom of such amplitude might involve risks of abuse. But the
framers of Constitution may well have reflected with Madison who was
the leading spirit in the preparation of the first Amendment of the
Federal Constitution that ‘it is better to leave a few noxious
branches to this luxuriant growth than by pruning them away, to injure
the vigour of those yielding the proper fruits.’” [Quoted in Near vs
Minnesota]

The other answer is not so sophisticated. It was given by an
experienced political figure – a man who later became our President:
it is a story of long ago but bears repetition.

It was at the time when my good friend Arun Shourie was the Editor of
The Indian Express. He had written an article critical of some action
of President Zail Singh and Gianji was so upset that he had Shourie
summoned to Rashtrapati Bhawan for a dressing-down. Shourie went
meekly (Arun when he writes roars like a tiger, but when he speaks, he
is most soft-spoken, almost like a lamb.)

Arun went and called on Gianiji and to his surprise, the Rashtrapati
showing him all his pearly white teeth, simply smiled and embraced him
and began exchanging pleasantries. “Shourie saab kya chal raha hai,”
and the like.

The secretary, who it was that had curtly summoned Shourie, then
whispered anxiously into the Presidential ear: “Sir, you are supposed
to get angry with him.” At which Zail Singh responded, typical of the
man: “Arre unko likhne do. Padhta kaun? [Let them write. Who reads?]”

That is perhaps a more pragmatic answer to the occasional abuses by
the press of its privileges.

But let me conclude the message conveyed to me in one final story.

Mario Cuomo was a governor of New York for many years – he was a wily
politician like Gianiji. He once addressed a prestigious body, the New
York Press Club, soon after the New York Times in an editorial had
accused him of exercising political patronage as governor through his
law firm run by his son.

Cuomo spoke about press freedom and this is what he said when speaking
of the First Amendment in the Constitution to the United States:

“The Founding Fathers knew precisely what they were dealing with. They
had a press. And the press of their time was not only guilty of bad
taste and inaccuracy, it was partisan, reckless, sometimes vicious.
Indeed, the founding fathers were themselves often at the point end of
the press sword…They knew the dangers. They knew that broad freedoms
would be inevitably accompanied by some abuse and even harm to
innocent people. Knowing all the odds, they chose to gamble on
liberty. And the gamble has made us all rich and happy. Overall, the
press has been a force for good – educating our people, guarding our
freedom, watching our government  –  challenging  it, goading it,
revealing it, forcing it into the open.”

I suggest then that on this day we adopt Governor Cuomo’s message and
“gamble on liberty” – there is no other democratic way.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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