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Outrage over jailing of Indian cartoonist Aseem Trivedi

Vanessa

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Outrage over jailing of Indian cartoonist Aseem Trivedi

AFP September 11, 20129:33PM

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Protesters gather outside the Mumbai jail where cartoonist Aseem Trivedi is being held in a sedition investigation. Source: AP

INDIA's government is facing a mounting domestic and international backlash over the arrest of a cartoonist on sedition charges as critics accused it of using colonial era laws to crush dissent.

The arrest at the weekend of Aseem Trivedi, a freelance cartoonist and anti-corruption campaigner, sparked outrage from activists who say that Indian authorities have become increasingly intolerant of criticism.

Media rights group Reporters Without Borders called for the immediate and unconditional release of Trivedi, who has refused to apply for bail saying that he wants all charges dropped.

"The prosecution and detention of the cartoonist are a gross violation of freedom of expression and information,'' the Paris-based organisation said.

Trivedi's arrest came shortly after India ordered more than 300 websites, social networking pages, Twitter accounts and other online content to be blocked in an attempt to halt the spread of rumours about ethnic violence.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) echoed calls for Trivedi to be freed in a case that has sparked widespread debate about freedom of expression in India.

"Criminalising Aseem Trivedi's efforts to highlight the serious problem of corruption is a perverse exercise of power and runs completely counter to India's democratic principles,'' said Bob Dietz, CPJ's Asia program coordinator.

Cartoons on Trivedi's website show the sole surviving gunman from the 2008 Mumbai attacks urinating on the Indian constitution, and the parliament building shaped as a huge toilet bowl.

Another cartoon titled "Gang Rape of Mother India'' shows a woman draped in the Indian flag being held down by a politician and a bureaucrat as a horned animal depicting corruption appears ready to attack her.

Trivedi was arrested in Mumbai under laws governing sedition, information technology and protecting India's national flag and constitution after a private complaint from a young lawyer based in the city.

A court on Monday ordered the cartoonist to be held in custody until September 24.

The Times of India in its lead editorial on Tuesday called for the British colonial-era sedition law to be scrapped.

"In independent India, instead of being revoked, the sedition law has been used against a variety of dissent,'' it said.

Independent India's politicians are clearly using the archaic colonial law as a tool of contemporary intimidation.''

The Indian Express said that moves against Trivedi were like using "an H-bomb to slay a rabbit''.

Law Minister Salman Khurshid has insisted that the Indian court system is independent of the government, adding that "there is rule of law and an appropriate procedure ... I am sure that the law will take its own course.''

In the most famous recent sedition case, Indian doctor and human rights activist Binayak Sen was jailed for life in 2010 for allegedly helping Maoist rebels.

He was freed on bail last year on the instructions of the Supreme Court which ruled that the sentence should be suspended.

India has recently shown sensitivity to criticism of its leaders, with the government responding angrily to a Washington Post article on the struggling Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who has been hit by a string of graft scandals.

Accusations of intolerance over satirical cartoons surfaced in May when MPs reacted in fury over an old cartoon being used in school textbooks lampooning B.R. Ambedkar, author of India's constitution.
 

Vanessa

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Cartoonist jailed for corruption drawings

Date September 12, 2012

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''Intolerant India'' ... Aseem Trivedi is led out of the Mumbai magistrate court after his arrest on sedition charges for lampooning government corruption. Photo: AP

NEW DELHI: The world's largest democracy is being derided as ''intolerant India''. But those who run the country don't get the joke.

A court has jailed the cartoonist Aseem Trivedi for anti-corruption cartoons it says are seditious, bringing him more attention than his drawings ever could.

Trivedi, an artist and anti-corruption campaigner in Kanpur, has been jailed under section 124A of India's penal code, the same law the British Raj used to imprison Mahatma Gandhi.

Trivedi has drawn the national Parliament as a giant toilet, suggested politicians' corruption was akin to drinking the blood of the people, and depicted the gang rape of ''mother India'' by corrupt politicians and bureaucrats.

But it is his reinterpretation of India's Ashok Chakra national emblem, changing the three lions atop a plinth to three salivating wolves, and altering the motto from ''Only truth triumphs'' to ''Only corruption triumphs'', that has attracted most controversy.

Acting on a complaint from a lawyer, police alleged his cartoons were ''ugly and obscene''.

When Trivedi refused a lawyer or to apply for bail, a Mumbai court jailed him for 14 days. ''If telling the truth makes me a traitor, then I am one,'' he said as he was arrested.

The Indian government is embroiled in yet another crippling corruption scandal in which coal-mining licences were corruptly allocated. It cost the government $33 billion. Scams of breathtaking size are almost routine under this government. Some see Trivedi's arrest as the latest example of growing intolerance to criticism on the part of Indian authorities.

When tensions between Muslims and north-east Indians flared in Bangalore and other cities last month, the government hurriedly shut down internet sites it felt were inflaming the issue. Twitter accounts that lampooned the Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, were also blocked.

In May, six historical political cartoons were censored from a government school textbook, including one of first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, whipping B.R. Ambedkar, author of India's constitution, as Ambedkar sat on a snail, urging him to hurry up.

Yesterday, Trivedi's website remained accessible and the drawings uncensored. The Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Ambika Soni, defended the laws and the court's decision.

''We are not against democratic rights, we are all for free speech … people have made cartoons of Nehru, Indira [Gandhi] earlier. But there is a thin line you draw between free speech and what can be termed as offensive especially against national symbols.''

But commentators and social media came out in fierce support for Trivedi. ''Scamsters who give away country's resources to friends for free are guilty of sedition, not cartoonists,'' the author Chetan Bhagat tweeted. Arvind Kejriwal, a leader of Indians Against Corruption, visited Trivedi yesterday, promising a mass protest unless he was released and charges dropped.
 
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