New Delhi, 20 September: Arrest of Delhi based veteran journalist under Official Secret Act has surprised many of Journalists fraternity. The Indian Journalists Union in a statement said that it noted with concern the arrest of veteran journalist, Rajeev Sharma, for alleged breach of the Officials Secrets Act. The union further said “The OSA from 1923 is anti-deluvian and needs to be redrafted in light of the fast changing needs of the modern nation State. More so, keeping in mind what it connotes for an open democratic society such as ours.”
There is a surfeit of information flow and one needs to assess that the documents that were allegedly passed were indeed sacrosanct military secrets, conveying of which is detrimental to our country’s interest and not merely something culled together from that available on a deep dive or research in public domain. Critical opinions or a differing perspective is to be respected, not necessarily anti-national and needs be delineated with care, particularly when it concerns the right to freedom of speech & expression as enshrined in Article 19 of our Constitution.
In a statement IJU President and former Member of Press Council of India Geetartha Pathak and Secretary General and IFJ Vice President Sabina Inderjit said that reputations are built over decades and can be spoilt in a just a jiff. The incident of ISRO scientist Nambi Narayanan who was finally exonerated by the courts for a similar accusation comes to mind. This is not to defend anyone guilty of wrong doing or acting antithetical to the interest of our country. We do hope that the Delhi police and other agencies of Government of India have acted judiciously, keeping fairness and objectivity in mind and not witch-hunting.
The Press Club of India on Saturday criticised the Delhi Police for arresting journalist Rajeev Sharma in an Official Secrets Act case for allegedly passing on information about the Indian Army’s deployment and the country’s border strategy to Chinese intelligence. It said that the police action against Sharma was “high-handed” and “mind-boggling”.
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