[<<In the last month or so – since this government was sworn in – a couple
of things have happened: the Enforcement Directorate (ED) filed a case
against journalist Raghav Bahl for alleged laundering of funds; the
Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) issued an order against
Radhika Roy and Prannoy Roy, promoters of NDTV, restraining them from
accessing the financial markets for two years and stripped them of
directorships of their broadcast television channel; an FIR was filed by
the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) against Anand Grover, well-known
lawyer, and an NGO he runs, the Lawyers Collective for violating rules of
accepting foreign funds; and police officer Sanjiv Bhatt was sentenced to
life imprisonment in a 30-year-old case.

In Uttar Pradesh, the Adityanath government booked rapper Hard Kaur for
sedition for social media posts against the chief minister and Mohan
Bhagwat, the head of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. Earlier, journalist
Prashant Kanojia had been arrested for social media posts against the chief
minister and is now out on bail. Kaur is based in the UK and thus out of
reach, but had she been in India, she would be behind bars today.
...
What should concern citizens is that critics of the government now will
have to be alert to being singled out for attention and investigation. ...
...
The establishment has let it be known that it is in no mood to be tolerant
of criticism. With a second-time majority at the Centre and many state
governments under its control, and an opposition numbed by its defeat or
busy protecting its own shrinking turf, the BJP is not going to waste any
time coming down on dissenters and other malcontents.

Rajnath Singh had warned that a new law on sedition would be enacted that
would be more stringent – that was not poll-time rhetoric. There will be no
room any more for the argumentative Indian – everyone is expected to fall
in line.>>

(Excerpted from the post below.)

<<Taking off from that basic proposition, the new regime is likely to have
two major focal points on the "political" front:
I. Dismantling of all opposition - both party and non-party.
Towards that, dislodging, maybe even dismissal, of, at least a few,
opposition-run state governments.
ED, IT, CBI raids on opposition politicians; also, in some cases, buying
out.
Tightening the screw, in a myriad (of) ways – including enhanced digital
surveillance, also as regards the civil society organisations and
dissenting individuals.>>

(Excerpted from '2019 Parliamentary Poll : Outcome: Drivers: Consequences :
An Exploration' at <
https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vSX4J7wt12TDUlBKNQ_x1AiIPFvYKiNay001ceKe6qrZD9kAy_8sdtYNE25Jbwk0A/pub
>.)]

https://thewire.in/rights/the-establishment-has-sent-a-hard-core-message-to-dissenters-and-critics

The Establishment Has Sent a Hard Core Message to Dissenters and Critics
There is very little room left for the argumentative Indian – everyone is
expected to fall in line.

The Establishment Has Sent a Hard Core Message to Dissenters and Critics
The establishment has let it be known that it is in no mood to be tolerant
of criticism. Photo: Ahdieh Ashrafi/Flickr CC 2.0

Sidharth Bhatia

12 HOURS AGO

In the last month or so – since this government was sworn in – a couple of
things have happened: the Enforcement Directorate (ED) filed a case against
journalist Raghav Bahl for alleged laundering of funds; the Securities and
Exchange Board of India (SEBI) issued an order against Radhika Roy and
Prannoy Roy, promoters of NDTV, restraining them from accessing the
financial markets for two years and stripped them of directorships of their
broadcast television channel; an FIR was filed by the Central Bureau of
Investigation (CBI) against Anand Grover, well-known lawyer, and an NGO he
runs, the Lawyers Collective for violating rules of accepting foreign
funds; and police officer Sanjiv Bhatt was sentenced to life imprisonment
in a 30-year-old case.

In Uttar Pradesh, the Adityanath government booked rapper Hard Kaur for
sedition for social media posts against the chief minister and Mohan
Bhagwat, the head of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. Earlier, journalist
Prashant Kanojia had been arrested for social media posts against the chief
minister and is now out on bail. Kaur is based in the UK and thus out of
reach, but had she been in India, she would be behind bars today.

In the first three cases, the government is not directly involved in the
actions taken by independent authorities and institutions. The ED, SEBI and
most of all the judiciary are supposed to be independent of direct
government control. So to imply that they were directed to take action in a
particular way would be incorrect. Nor would it be tenable to suggest that
they should not face charges for any irregularities or crimes they may have
committed.

Equally true, however, is the fact that Bahl, the Roys and Bhatt have, in
different ways, been critical of Narendra Modi and his government. In the
case of Bahl, after being a supporter at one time, he began to sharply
criticise the Modi government’s policies. NDTV is a fair and balanced
channel, and even on occasion has leaned towards giving the right-wing some
extra leeway, but is not seen as friendly enough and being part of the
‘Lutyens’ in-crowd’. As for Bhatt, he has been going for the jugular,
raising questions about the culpability of Modi in the 2002 killings in
Gujarat.

SEBI and ED have shown remarkable swiftness in coming down on the Roys and
Bahl and in Bhatt’s case, the Gujarat law enforcement system has shown no
such efficiency in 180 other cases that have taken place between 2001-2016
– not a single policeman has been convicted.

Coming to the Hard Kaur case, her posts may be overly critical and even
seen as offensive and defamatory, but in no way are they seditious. The
Indian constitution has a wide definition of sedition but also provides
exceptions – merely being critical of the government cannot be grounds for
arrest, otherwise, journalists and many others would be in jail. (Though,
given that much of the media is so complimentary about this government,
criticism may well one day be seen as an ‘anti-national’ and seditious
act.) There are many provisions that the UP government or indeed Adityanath
in his personal capacity could have used to sue Kaur, but his police chose
to go with a charge of sedition – which has become the first option of a
force wanting to show it is taking action.

Also read: The Importance of Being a Conscientious Objector Within Systems
of Power

The swiftness and the hard line taken by regulatory bodies, governments and
even the courts on crimes or misdemeanours signal that from now on, no
quarter can be expected from the system. SEBI must have scores of cases of
corporate malfeasance – the newspapers are full of promoters, companies and
mutual funds playing fast and loose with public funds – but there has
hardly been any punitive action against any of them. The ED has alleged
that Bahl illegally bought an apartment in London – for the princely sum of
a little over Rs 2 crores, which will barely get a matchbox flat in Mumbai
– which his wife says was declared in her tax returns. This could have been
a routine tax enquiry and is hardly a big case for the Enforcement
Directorate.

But this is not merely about the double standards of agencies – that big
guns often get away lightly is a sad fact of life in India, as is
government interference in the affairs of bodies that are supposed to be
independent – the Supreme Court has called the CBI a ‘caged parrot’, and
governments of all hues have used it in the past.

What should concern citizens is that critics of the government now will
have to be alert to being singled out for attention and investigation.
Politicians are becoming prickly about criticism on Twitter and the BJP is
hardly alone in this. But the enthusiasm with which BJP governments use the
law of sedition for what is at worst libellous is alarming. In January, the
BJP-led government in Assam filed sedition charges against three people,
including the eminent writer Hiren Gohain for their remarks against the
controversial Citizenship Bill.

Does this mean that now even criticism of policies can be seen as a cry for
revolt against the state? Will academics, activists and journalists who
write and speak against the government face arrest, jail or worse,
conviction? It is a frightening thought.

Also read: A Short History of the RSS and BJP’s Double Standard on Sedition

These actions are bound to have a chilling effect. There is no need to pass
any preemptive law to curb freedom of speech and expression – the media has
already rolled over and waits to be tickled and powerful public figures
tend to be extremely wary of expressing any dissenting opinion. At the
ground level, people are being lynched for their beliefs, diets or just for
being from a particular religion. And when someone refuses to shut up, the
heavy hand of the law falls upon them. Anyone can be picked up by the
police for a Facebook post or tweet.

The establishment has let it be known that it is in no mood to be tolerant
of criticism. With a second-time majority at the Centre and many state
governments under its control, and an opposition numbed by its defeat or
busy protecting its own shrinking turf, the BJP is not going to waste any
time coming down on dissenters and other malcontents.

Rajnath Singh had warned that a new law on sedition would be enacted that
would be more stringent – that was not poll-time rhetoric. There will be no
room any more for the argumentative Indian – everyone is expected to fall
in line.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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