[Comment by Paranjoy Guha Thakurta on his FB wall:

<<Adani Power ‘loses’ defamation case against Wire, Paranjoy Guha Thakurta,
Shinzani Jain, Advait Rao Palepu and Abir Dasgupta - Bhuj court calls for
redaction of a line and an adverb in an article >3,500 words. Yet some were
intimidated by a legal notice.>>]

http://www.counterview.net/2017/12/adanis-lose-defamation-case-on-wire-ex.html

Sunday, December 31, 2017

Adanis "lose" defamation case on The Wire, ex-EPW editor Thakurta, court
just asks it to withdraw a sentence, an adverb

By Our Representative

In yet another major victory for the top news portal "The Wire", which
republished  an article by Paranjoy Guha Thakurta and three other
journalists from the "Economic Political Weekly" (EPW), "Modi Government’s
Rs 500-Crore Bonanza to the Adani Group", Principal Senior Civil Judge
Jaiminkumar R Pandit, Bhuj, Kutch, has "rejected" the defamation suit
against the publishers and authors of the article, even as directing them
to remove a sentence and a word from it.

Sub-titled "The government has quietly tweaked rules relating to special
economic zones – and the new rules specifically favour the Adani Group"
(June 17, 2017), the sentence of the article which the civil judge ordered
to be removed is, "The High Court was misled and wrongly recorded the
customs duty on electricity from the SEZ to DTA will not be maintainable as
this will lead to double taxation", and also the adverb "Surprisingly" in
the same paragraph, as the allegation lacked "verification."

Delivered on November 16 this year, though surprisingly went unnoticed
despite the high profile nature of the case, the order said, except this
"direction", all the prayers of personal defamation against the publishers
and the authors were being "rejected". As the EPW had already withdrawn the
controversial article from its site following the defamation law suit, the
direction pertained to "The Wire", which refused to withdraw the
republished article.
Complying by the order, "The Wire" said, in its endnote to the article,
"The Wire had contested the application for injunction moved by M/s Adani
Power Limited, regarding the article titled 'Modi Government’s Rs 500-Crore
Bonanza to the Adani Group'. The Ld Principal Senior Civil Judge
(Bhuj-Kacch) has accepted all 'The Wire’s' contentions in the said
application and has only ordered removal of one line pertaining to a High
Court decision as well as one adverb."

The news portal added, "'The Wire' is complying with the Ld Principal
Senior Civil Judge’s order dated November 16, 2017 and removing the said
sentence and adverb", even as upholding the order. It is not known if the
Adani Group would approach a higher judiciary against the Bhuj court order.

The legal victory of the "The Wire" on the Adani defamation case comes
alongside a major setback suffered by the son of BJP president Amit Shah,
Jay, who filed a Rs 100 crore defamation case against "The Wire" for an
article on meteoric rise ("16,000 times") in his business activities
following the party's ascension to power at the Centre in 2014. The civil
court, Mirzapur, Ahmedabad, vacated the "ex parte ad interim injunction"
imposed on the news portal by it in October.

Ejecting the case, the court, in its written order, observed that that a
questionnaire and an email were sent to the Adani Group before publishing
the article, and that the article was published "upon material available",
hence the article "cannot be said to be defamatory", and hence "there is no
prima facie case."

The article became controversial not just because it had sought to placate
one of the top Indian business groups, widely regarded as close to Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. Soon after Adani Group filed its defamation case,
the EPW withdrew the article from its online portal, making Thakurta, the
main author, resign from his post as editor of the top research journal.

Reporting on the withdrawal of the article on the EPW, "The Wire", which
republished the article, not only declared that it would not take down the
article, but commented, "Worried about the threat of an expensive lawsuit
by one of India’s biggest corporate houses, the trustees running the
journal (EPW) ordered the removal of an article critical of Adani Power
Ltd."

"The Wire" decided to fight the law suit filed by the Adani Group along
with the article's authors, who included Abir Dasgupta, EPW editorial
assistant, and two independent journalists Advait Rao Palepu and Shinzani
Jain.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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