Why in the news?
- The Supreme Court of India has remarked that it is ‘high time’ to reconsider the criminalisation of defamation.
Criminalisation of Defamation
- What is Defamation?: Defamation means harming a person’s reputation through words, writings, signs, or visible representations.
- Legal Provisions Deal with Defamation:
- Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023: Section 354 of the BNS 2023 defines defamation and prescribes punishment, which includes simple imprisonment for up to 2 years, a fine, or both.
- Arguments in Favour of Criminalisation:
- Right to Reputation: Recognised as part of Article 21 (Right to Life).
- Deterrent Effect: Prevents reckless false allegations and malicious speech.
- Balance with Free Speech: Reasonable restriction under Article 19(2).
- Maintains Social Harmony: Prevents defamatory statements that may cause unrest.
- Arguments Against Criminalisation:
- Chilling Effect: Threat of criminal trial discourages dissent, satire, and investigative journalism.
- Disproportionate Penalty: Criminal sanction is excessive for a private wrong; civil remedies are more proportionate.
- International Norms: Countries like the UK (2009) have decriminalised defamation.
- Scope for Misuse: Often invoked by powerful individuals and governments to silence criticism.
- Burden on Courts: Adds to pendency in the criminal justice system.
- Judicial Stand:
- Subramanian Swamy v. Union of India (2016):
- SC upheld the constitutional validity of criminal defamation.
- Stated that the “right to reputation” is an intrinsic part of Article 21.
- Subramanian Swamy v. Union of India (2016):
- Way Forward
- Decriminalisation & Strengthening Civil Remedies: Damages, retractions, apologies.
- Safeguards for Free Speech: Stronger protection for fair comment, media, satire.
- Fast-Track Civil Adjudication: Reduce pendency and ensure timely justice.
- Awareness & Ethics: Encourage responsible journalism without silencing criticism.