Tuesday, 13 January 2015

India's Troubled Tryst With Free Speech


AP PHOTO/MARKUS SCHREIBER
OPINION

The attack on French weekly Charlie Hebdo has sparked off a furious debate globally about the limits of freedom of speech
. In India, that fundamental freedom is a legal oxymoron.


My old boss, MJ Akbar, had only one commandment in journalism, so far as I remember. This was 
(and I am paraphrasing him): write whatever you want about any subject, but never make fun of religion.
 I am not sure whether this was said because he wanted his newspapers to show respect for religion or 
if he wanted to avoid the trouble that usually comes when religion is ridiculed in our parts. Perhaps 
it was both.

Writing in Business Standard about the attack on the French weekly Charlie Hebdo, TN Ninan wrote that
: "Many societies, especially those who are a part of the Western Enlightenment, admit to few, if any, 
limits on the right to free speech  including the right to offend. Free speech was included in the
 'Declaration on the Rights of Man' during the French Revolution as 'one of the most
 precious' rights of man." 

However, he added, "in the broad tradition of Sarva Dharm Samabhav (equality of all religions), 
it is pretty much inconceivable that any Indian publication would publish a cartoon (of Prophet
 Mohammed) in the full knowledge that it would cause offence to millions." Yes, and even if an 
adventurous editor were to be so inclined, he would probably desist because of the trouble it would bring
. Not just the violence and the threats, but also the legal problems.
India has a troubled tryst with free speech and even the great Jawaharlal Nehru was unsure of how
 to approach this fundamental freedom. Article 19 (1)(a) of our Constitution guaranteed free speech 
to Indians on 26 January, 1950. Fifteen months later, Nehru backed down from this guarantee and
 imposed restrictions.

Half-a-dozen laws restrict freedom of speech in India. Many of these are strange. Ninan adds in his
 piece that "India has a more nuanced approach; the right to free speech is a fundamental but not an
absolute right; the Constitution limits it on grounds of 'public order' as well as 'decency and morality',
 all of which are elastic terms. Why, even writing that which could affect relations with friendly 
countries is debarred. Apart from the issue of principle, there is the practical difficulty that there i
s no approved list of friendly and unfriendly countries."

There are specific laws that we have on provoking religious violence, promoting enmity, insulting a 
religion and wounding religious feelings. But these laws aren’t new.

Our laws curbing free speech were drafted in 1837. When he was only 33, Thomas Macaulay began
 producing the Indian Penal Code. It has continued in more or less the same form for 175 years. 
It shows what a remarkably unchanging culture we are despite living amid the trappings of modernity. 
The code, a colonial set of laws, remains in force in free India. This is because an Englishman accurately 
assessed us, and predicted our behaviour and our reaction to external stimulus. This makes Macaulay
 a very great man. He could tell with confidence in 1837 how many of us would go bestial in 1984 and 
1993 and 2002. The Constitution made great and universal promises, but then succumbed to 
the reality of India's communal violence.

For journalists, who are in the frontline of the free speech debate, it is not easy to see the issue in black
 and white. I did not know that Charlie Hebdo had fired one of its journalists for anti-Semitism.
 I was surprised to know this had happened, given how enthusiastic the magazine was about
 attacking Islam.

The Daily Telegraph reported in 2009 that Maurice Sinet, 80, who works under the pen name Sine,
 faces charges of 'inciting racial hatred' for a column he wrote last July in the satirical weekly
 Charlie Hebdo. The piece sparked a summer slanging match among the Parisian intelligentsia and
 ended in his dismissal from the magazine. 'L'affaire Sine' followed the engagement of Mr Jean Sarkozy,
22, to Jessica Sebaoun-Darty, the Jewish heiress of an electronic goods chain. Commenting on an
 unfounded rumour that the (then) president's son planned to convert to Judaism, Sine quipped:
 "He'll go a long way in life, that little lad."

A high-profile political commentator slammed the column as linking prejudice about Jews and
 social success. Charlie Hebdo's editor, Philippe Val, asked Sinet to apologise but he refused, 
exclaiming: "I'd rather cut my testicles off."

Mr Val's decision to fire Sine was backed by a group of eminent intellectuals, including the 
philosopher Bernard-Henry Lévy, but parts of the libertarian Left defended him,
 citing the right to free speech.

It might seem as a clear case of hypocrisy, but, like all of us, Charlie Hebdo also had its
 doubts about free speech.

http://www.outlookindia.com/article/Indias-Troubled-Tryst-With-Free-Speech/293092

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