
Haridwar hate speeches | Uttarakhand says it has filed four FIRs, three chargesheets
The Hindu
State’s response comes after Supreme Court asks why there have been no arrests
The Uttarakhand government on April 13 informed the Supreme Court that it had registered four FIRs and filed three chargesheets against those accused of delivering hate speeches at a ‘dharam sansad’ in Haridwar.
The court had, in the previous hearing, sought Uttarakhand’s response as to why there had been no arrests months after the alleged incident in December last year.
The petitions filed by Anjana Praakash, a former High Court judge, and journalist Qurban Ali submitted that “open calls for the extermination of an entire religious community” were made at Haridwar and a similar programme held in Delhi.
Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, for the petitioners, said another such event was due in Himachal Pradesh in a few days.
“I cannot even read out what they say in these programmes,” Mr. Sibal said.
A Bench led by Justices A.M. Khanwilkar and A.S. Oka asked the petitioners to serve Himachal Pradesh’s standing counsel a copy of their application impleading the State in the case.
The court also gave the petitioners liberty to inform the District Collector of the area concerned where the dharam sansad was going to be held in Himachal Pradesh. The court had previously also advised the petitioners to make a representation to the local authorities, making their apprehensions clear that speeches in these dharm sansads may run the risk of violating the penal law against hate and were against the judgments of the Supreme Court.