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Cops can't probe private defamation case against Rahul Gandhi, rules SC

The Supreme Court today deferred till August 23 the hearing on Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s plea seeking quashing of a complaint filed against him for his remark stating that the RSS had a role in Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination.

India TV Politics Desk India TV Politics Desk New Delhi Published on: July 27, 2016 17:49 IST
Rahul Gandhi
Rahul Gandhi

The Supreme Court today deferred till August 23 the hearing on Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s plea seeking quashing of a complaint filed against him for his remark stating that the RSS had a role in Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination.

The apex court also said that magistrates cannot ask the police to investigate a private criminal defamation complaint as it is the complainant who needs to prove the case. The court’s observation came on a lower court’s direction to Maharashtra police to probe the defamation case against Rahul.

Rahul is facing a defamation complaint for his remarks allegedly accusing RSS for assassination of Mahatma Gandhi and has sought its quashing from the apex court which had observed that the leader should not have resorted to "collective denunciation" of an organisation (RSS) and will have to face trial if he does not express regret.

A bench of Justices Dipak Misra and R F Nariman, at the outset, referred to an earlier judgement delivered on a batch of pleas, including the one filed by BJP leader Subramanian Swamy and Rahul each, challenging the constitutional validity of penal defamation law and said that police cannot be asked by judicial magistrates to probe a private defamation complaint.

It also prima facie found fault with the order of the Maharashtra lower court asking the police to inquire into the allegations against Rahul and said that instead of "quashing" the case, it may "remand" the matter back to the lower court.

"We have said in the Subramaniam Swamy case that the police has no role in private criminal complaints...Whatever has to be established, it has to be established by the man (complainant) himself. The magistrates cannot call for a report from the police," the bench said.

It asked senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for the Congress leader, to read relevant portions of the judgment, penned by Justice Misra, in the Subramanian Swamy case, dealing with the power of police and magistrates in criminal defamation cases.

"Police has no role in criminal defamation. It cannot lodge an FIR and a Magistrate cannot seek a inquiry report from police under sections 156 (3) and 202 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The Magistrate has to himself make inquiry into the allegations...This is altogether a different process," it said.

The bench then deferred the hearing to August 23 and asked the counsel for both sides including senior advocate U R Lalit to address it on legal proposition with regard to power of magistrates and police in such cases.

Rahul, at an election rally, had accused the RSS of killing Mahatma Gandhi.

“RSS people killed Gandhiji and today their people (BJP) talk of him…They opposed Sardar Patel and Gandhiji,” he had said, prompting a member of the RSS to file a criminal defamation complaint against Rahul.

With PTI Inputs

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