New Delhi:Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi Saturday moved the Supreme Court challenging the Gujarat High Court's refusal to stay his conviction in the criminal defamation case over his 'Modi surname' remark.
In his petition, Gandhi said he did not get a "fair trial" in the present case from the very beginning and "if political satire were to be held to be a base motive, then any political speech which is colourfully critical of the government would become an act of moral turpitude, which would completely corrode the foundations of democracy". The conviction in the case led to his disqualification as a Lok Sabha MP earlier this year.
Gandhi’s plea said he has the right to criticize and comment upon the measures undertaken by the prime minister, who is his political opponent, and merely because he was critical or he had a different opinion, the complaint for defamation can’t be sustained against him. “It is in that context that the Petitioner addressed Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi as a thief for a substantial reason that the money of the poor people of the country was given away to Shri Anil Ambani. Neither complainant nor his witnesses say that the allegations in this regard were false. The Petitioner, if at all spoke as to why the surname of all thieves is Modi, he spoke of it in relation to this theme of misgovernance of Shri Modi and not in connection with any Modi samaj or persons holding Modi surname”, said the plea.
The plea contended that the high court after considering the irrelevant factor(s) has invented a hitherto unknown definition for the seriousness of an offence through several leaps of logic - by first misreading and misconstruing the idea of ‘moral turpitude’ and then using that misconstrued notion also to misconstrue the idea of a ‘serious offence.’
The plea contended that depravity and vileness, which are the essential core of moral turpitude, are associated with rapists, serious murderers, heinous violence, and such other similar crimes. “To equate a political speech criticizing the government or a section of society, even if defamatory, sets a completely incongruous standard unknown to jurisprudence which deals with moral turpitude”, it added.
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The plea contended that the high court has manifestly fallen in error in using the same parameter for determining the seriousness of offence in the present case, wherein , the petitioner has exceptionally been given the maximum punishment of 2 years of imprisonment.