>
> In India, of course, "free speech" carries terms and conditions. A cartoon
> like that could land one in jail.
> Read: http://eastwords.blogspot.com/2006/02/publish-and-be-damned_06.html

Free speech carries "terms and conditions" everywhere. There is no such
thing as an absolute right to free speech, and there shouldn't be - the
only question is how far the restrictions should go. In particular, with a
bias against what the Americans call "prior restraint", or preventing
speech before it is made, as opposed to letting people speak knowing that
their words may have consequences (such as a libel suit).

I know the author of that blog above - one thing his blog post doesn't
mention is that all those IPC provisions which restrict speech were
drafted in the 1860s when the world was different - some of them may even
be unconstitutional for infringing on the right of free speech in the
Constitution, only they haven't been challenged yet. (The famous section
377 of the IPC criminalizing homosexuality is only now being challenged,
150 years after it was written).

The point I'm making is that although Indian free speech laws aren't quite
as broad as the American First Amendment, they are pretty broad, and it is
a strong right which has been repeatedly upheld by the courts, with the
odd exception. The real threat to free speech in India is NOT governmental
action or laws, it is the possibility of a mob rolling up to your house
and burning it, or lynching you, and having a hundred "public interest
lawsuits" filed against you. (See eg Nikki Bedi's talk show after Ashok
Row Kavi - Nikki Bedi didn't even SAY anything and she was hounded..)

B

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