Solicitor General Declines Nod to Contempt Case Against Swara Bhasker
Solicitor General Declines Nod to Contempt Case Against Swara Bhasker
The consent of either the Attorney General or the Solicitor General is necessary, under section 15 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, for initiating contempt proceedings against a person.

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta on Wednesday refused consent to a plea seeking initiation of criminal contempt proceedings against Bollywood actor Swara Bhasker for her alleged “derogatory and scandalous” statements against the Supreme Court on the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid verdict. The SG’s denial came within days of Attorney General K K Venugopal declining the go-ahead saying that Bhasker’s comment appeared to be her “perception” about the issue.

“The Attorney General for India, on August 21, has declined to provide his consent for the reasons stated in the reply of the AG… “Considering the fact that the Attorney General for India has already declined to grant his consent in the present matter for the reasons detailed in the said letter…the present request made to me is misconceived,” Mehta said in his letter addressed to lawyer Anuj Saxena.     Saxena, on behalf of petitioner Usha Shetty, had sought consent of the law officer for initiating the contempt against Bhasker after Venugopal’s decision against it.

The consent of either the Attorney General or the Solicitor General is necessary, under section 15 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, for initiating contempt proceedings against a person. Venugopal, in a two-page letter to Saxena on August 21, had said the actor’s “statement in the first part appears to be a factual one, and is a perception of the speaker”.

Venugopal had said, “The comment refers to the judgement of the Supreme Court, and is not an attack on the institution. This does not offer any comment on the Supreme Court itself or say anything that would scandalise or tend to scandalise, or lower or tend to lower the authority of the Supreme Court.”

He had said the second part of the statement is a vague statement not related to any particular court, and “something is so general that no one would take any serious note of this statement”.

Venugopal said, “I do not think that this is a case where the offence of scandalising the court or lowering the authority of the court would arise. I therefore decline consent to initiate contempt proceedings.” On August 18, the plea filed before the Attorney General by advocate Mahek Maheshwari, who along with lawyers Anuj Saxena and Prakash Sharma, has alleged that Bhasker made these statements at a panel discussion on February 1, 2020 organised by the Mumbai Collective.

It claimed that Bhasker had made “derogatory and scandalous” statements against the courts in the country and mentioned the Ayodhya case judgement. The petition intends to initiate criminal contempt proceedings against Bhasker for “passing a derogatory and scandalous statement in context of the Supreme Court of India on February 1, 2020 at a panel discussion organised by Mumbai Collective,” it said.

A five-judge constitution bench of the apex court had on November 9 last year delivered a unanimous verdict paving the way for construction of a Ram temple at the disputed site in Ayodhya and had directed the Centre to allot a five-acre plot to the Sunni Waqf Board for building a mosque.

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