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Bhima-Koregaon Case: Supreme Court Extends House Arrest Of Human Rights Activists

The apex court bench said if there are some grave lapses, it may consider prayers like the investigation by a SIT into the case.

Writer P Varavara Rao, arrested in connection with the Bhima Koregaon case, being produced at a court in Pune. (Source: PTI)
Writer P Varavara Rao, arrested in connection with the Bhima Koregaon case, being produced at a court in Pune. (Source: PTI)

The Supreme Court today said that it would examine two days later whether there is material supporting the arrest of the five rights activists in connection with the Koregaon-Bhima violence.

A bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra extended till Sept. 19 the house arrest of the five rights activists—Varavara Rao, Arun Ferreira, Vernon Gonsalves, Sudha Bharadwaj and Gautam Navlakha at their respective homes.

“Every criminal investigation is based on allegations and we have to see whether there is some material,” the bench, also comprising Justices AM Khanwilkar and DY Chandrachud said.

The bench said if there are some grave lapses, it may consider prayers like the investigation by a Special Investigating Team into the case.

The plea by Thapar and others has sought an independent probe into the arrests and the immediate release of the five activists.

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The bench fixed the plea by Thapar, economists Prabhat Patnaik and Devaki Jain, sociology professor Satish Deshpande and human rights lawyer Maja Daruwala for final hearing on Wednesday. The court had on Sept. 12 extended the house arrest of the activists till today.

Additional Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for Maharashtra government, said the court should make it clear that after adjudication by it, the arrested accused cannot avail remedies simultaneously on similar issues at other judicial fora.

The Maharashtra police had arrested the rights activists on Aug. 28 in connection with an FIR lodged following a conclave—'Elgaar Parishad' held on Dec. 31 last year that later triggered violence at Koregaon-Bhima village.

Prominent Telugu poet Rao was arrested on Aug. 28 in Hyderabad, while activists Gonsalves and Ferreira were nabbed in Mumbai, trade union activist Sudha Bharadwaj in Faridabad, Haryana, and civil liberties activist Navlakha in Delhi.

The Supreme Court had on Sept. 06 taken strong exception to the statement of a senior police officer on the arrest of the activists, saying he had cast aspersions on the top court.

An irked court had referred to the statements made to the media by an Assistant Commissioner of Police of Pune and said he was casting aspersions on the apex court by saying it should not have entertained the petition against the arrests.

The Maharashtra government had told the court that the petitioners were strangers to the mater and questioned their locus. Its counsel had said there was enough evidence including the materials taken from the activists' computers and other sources which belied the perception of the petitioners about those arrested.

Senior advocate Harish Salve, the counsel for Tushar Damgude who had filed the FIR in the Koregaon-Bhima violence, had opposed the plea of Thapar and said it could have been raised in the magistrate's court by the affected parties.

Earlier, the Maharashtra government had filed its response to the plea claiming the five activists were arrested due to the cogent evidence linking them with the banned CPI (Maoist) and not because of their dissenting views.

The state’s response had come in the backdrop of the apex court, while ordering the house arrest of the five activists on Aug. 29, categorically stating that dissent is the safety valve of democracy.

The court had questioned the state police's move to arrest these activists nine months after the incident and said all of them were reputed citizens and "stifling the dissent" was not good.

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