Democracy is under threat in Bengal but the media is turning a blind eye to it. Opposition leaders are attacked by goons with impunity.
On 13 May, Union Minister Babul Supriyo alleged that TMC goons pelted stones at his convoy near Bengal’s Basirhat. The rage and anarchy that earlier seemed sporadic now seem far more systemic in West Bengal, and the arrest of Priyanka Sharma is a manifestation of that.
Priyanka Sharma has gone from being just another BJP youth volunteer to a national symbol of freedom of speech. Her crime was to post a meme on Mamata Banerjee with Metgala look. Priyanka was also a key participant in the protest against Mamata Banerjee’s decision to ban Durga idol immersions on Muharram in 2017.
Priyanka’s Facebook profile is that of an ordinary booth-level worker. There are selfies, pictures from BJP rallies and political camps where she seems to be distributing Modi merchandise. There are BJP promotional messages that she shared on her Facebook page with pictures of Modi and BJP president Amit Shah and local slogans in Bangla.
Priyanka has shown courage to take a stand against chief minister’s autocratic ways by constantly making her support for the saffron party public. Aside from the Lok Sabha elections reaching the last and most heated phase, the other situation that went into making Priyanka an instant hero was that lawyers in Kolkata are on strike. On April 24, clashes broke out in Howrah between the police and lawyers, and ever since, the local lawyers have been on strike against the alleged brutality of the state police.
Around 15,000 lawyers across 85 courts in West Bengal are on strike. In Bengal, courage and not merit seems to be making heroes out of anonymous people who resist her ways.
Priyanka was unfairly subjected to imprisonment for doing what nearly everybody does at some point or the other: share a meme on social media. But the scale at which the incident has been discussed also presents itself as an opportunity for her to turn into a voice of resistance in Bengal politics.
What makes this whole situation so worrisome is not just that an apology is being demanded by the Supreme Court here without any such request coming from the supposedly offended party, but that the court has allowed itself to conflate legal issues with non-legal issues.
It ignores basic dicta on freedom of speech, and how only reasonable restrictions on this can be permitted. It ignores the fundamental rule of judicial decision-making, that a judicial order must be justifiable on form and substance. And it creates an entirely new jurisprudence on treating such cases differently from precedent just because the judges want to do so.
This is not exactly an approach which will inspire much confidence in the general population, that their fundamental rights are going to be protected.
The case against BJP youth leader Priyanka Sharma has reignited the debate on freedom of expression in West Bengal ever since the Trinamool government assumed power. Priyanka’s case has also brought to the fore the 2012 case lodged against Ambikesh Mahapatra, a chemistry professor of Jadavpur University.
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