Home Ministry panel to define hate speech, have IPC section on free speech

Updated : May 26, 2021 17:01
|
Editorji News Desk

A panel originally set up for suggesting reforms in the Indian Penal Code (IPC) will now propose a separate section on “offences relating to speech and expression” and will attempt to define “hate speech" according to an exclusive report by The Hindu.

The report says that there is no clear definition of what constitutes “hate speech” in the IPC. The Committee for Reforms in Criminal Laws, constituted by the Home Ministry, is attempting for the first time to define such speech. The committee is expected to submit its report soon.

Earlier this month, observing that an extreme or harsh point of view would not amount to hate speech, the Bombay High Court quashed an FIR against a Navi Mumbai resident. The court said, the right to express one’s views is a protected and cherished right in our democracy, just because the point of view of the petitioner is extreme or harsh will not make it a hate speech.

On April 30, the Supreme Court agreed to hear a plea challenging the legal validity of Section 124A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) that deals with the offence of sedition.

Hate Speechsedition caseHome MinistryIPC

Recommended For You

editorji | India

Two Monkeypox cases reported in Kerala

editorji | India

Congress twisted facts, distorted my statement on Ambedkar: Amit Shah

editorji | India

One dead, 66 rescued after ferry capsizes off Mumbai coast

editorji | India

PM Modi to visit Kuwait on December 21-22

editorji | India

Hindi poet Gagan Gill, English writer Easterine Kire among recipients of Sahitya Akademi Awards