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SC stays defamation complaint of Jay Shah, chides media

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The today asked a trial court not to proceed till April 12 with the criminal complaint of Jay Shah, son of Shah, against portal 'The Wire' and its scribes and chided especially the for projecting "whatever they feel like" against a person.

A visibly irked tongue-lashed the media, especially the TV channels and portals, and asked: "Can somebody reproduce something in official/public domain and add something 'defamatory' to it. Are innuendos in the realm of defence or realm of freedom".

"Can they write whatever they want? What they write sometimes amounts to serious contempt of court. Is this journalism? should be more responsible. I do not want to name channels, but some people think they are Popes sitting on the pulpit, passing judgement. They should be more responsible and the realisation must dawn upon them," the bench, also comprising Justices A M Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachud, said.

The bench issued notice to and other co-petitioner who had filed the complaint against the portal and its journalists including and asked them to respond in two weeks.

"In the meantime, for complainant (Shah) shall apprise about the pendency of matters before this Court. We are sure the shall take note of it and may not proceed with the case till April 12," the court said.

At the outset, Kapil Sibal, appearing for the portal and scribes, said the article contained details from records which are in "public domain electronically".

"This is how journalism is throttled in this country. A has no right to question how profits went up by 80 crore," the asked and added how will journalism flourish.

The bench said there were two issues -- whether factual additions in the article were defamatory or not, and can the editors, who were not part of the article, be also made parties.

Another Raju Ramachandran said that even the has been "roped in".

Neeraj Kishan Kaul, appearing for Shah, vehemently countered Sibal saying they say that facts are in public domain, but was it permissible to "selectively" use the information and lace them with innuendos. It was "scurrilous" reporting.

"Can you selectively pick up facts, concoct them with a motive. It is a manufactured controversy," Kaul said, adding that the controversy has been created because the father of happened to be the of a political party and they did not carry the version of Jay at the first instance.

The story published by 'The Wire' was a manufactured story and "an example of irresponsible journalism", he said, adding that the reasoned and detailed order of the trial court and the High Court, which even quoted the apex court verdicts, should not be stayed.

The freedom of speech and expression cannot be used to damage the reputation of a person, Kaul said.

The CJI, who said his observations have "nothing to do with this case", was critical of the and said they sometimes wrote completely baseless stories on their websites to defame people.

Sibal said journalists vilify politicians and there should not be in each case and added that if the son of a (Shah) has been vilified, there was another (Chidambaram) whose son is also being vilified.

He then referred to the tweet of an eminent person from Chennai who had allegedly tweeted about a who had heard Karti's case, that he was once junior to P Chidambaram.

"No action was taken. This court should have taken a suo motu note of this defamatory tweet," Sibal said.

During the hearing, the CJI said "you all are responsible of the country and now, anyone can write something and get away with it".

"I have told many times about Freedom of Speech and Expression. We are not going to gag the media.The question of gagging the media does not arise. But the press should be more responsible," the CJI said.

"How can anyone write whatever they feel about anyone. There are limits," the CJI observed. "... their writing sometimes amounts to sheer contempt of court," he added.

The high court had on January 8 rejected a plea filed by the portal, seeking quashing of the complaint filed against it by Jay over an article related to his company.

He had moved the lower court alleging by the petitioners after the article published by the website claimed his company's turnover grew exponentially after the BJP-led government came to power at the Centre in 2014.

The complaint was filed against the of the article Rohini Singh, founding editors of the portal Siddharth Varadarajan, and M K Venu, Monobina Gupta, and the The foundation publishes

Jay has separately filed a civil suit of Rs 100 crore against the website over the article. He has also rejected the charges made in the article, insisting that the story was "false, derogatory and defamatory".

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, March 15 2018. 19:35 IST
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