Tehelka.com journalist freed on bail
Organisation:
Kumar Badal, a reporter with the news website Tehelka.com, was freed on bail on 13 January after six months in prison, by order of the supreme court in New Delhi. His release was welcomed by Tehelka editor Tarun Tejpal, who noted that the site had been victimised for the past two years. Bail was set at 50,000 rupees (about 1,000 euros). At the last minute, police tried to foil the court order, claiming their inquiries were not yet complete. Badal is still however under house arrest in New Delhi and must report to the Central Bureau of investigation on the first Monday of each month. He is also banned from the northern district of Saharanpur, where the original complaint against him was filed
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An Uttar Pradesh judge turned down on August 21 the request for release on bail filed by the lawyer acting for journalist Kumar Badal, who has decided to continue
his hunger strike. Meanwhile, the authorities have confiscated the passport of Aniruddha Bahal, another journalist with Tehelka.com.
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14.07.2002
As journalist Kumar Badal of the investigative web site Tehelka.com began a
hunger strike to protest against his continuing detention after more than
one month, Reporters Without Borders today joined those in India who are
speaking out against the government's policies of intimidating the
investigative press.
In a letter to Interior Minister Lal Krishna Advani, Reporters Without
Borders secretary-general Robert Ménard recalled that he had already written
to him on 27 June to protest against a search of Tehelka.com's offices. "The
arrest of two of the site's journalists in the past month constitutes a
further stage in the harassment of this independent press site. We ask you
to have this intimidation brought to an end and to drop the proceedings
against these journalists", the letter said.
As well as requesting Badal's release, the letter also recalled the case of
the Kashmir Times' bureau chief in New Delhi, Iftikhar Gilani, who has been
detained since 9 June for having allegedly violated the country's Official
Secrets Act.
Badal, held since 3 July, began his hunger strike on 5 August. In a letter
published on the site, he wrote that, "The only reason I am suffering in
this manner is because I am a journalist from Tehelka.com, which took up the
cudgels to expose the corruption in high places in the governance of the
day". He said he would continue his hunger strike "no matter what" until a
judicial decision was taken in his case. "The jail authorities have already
started to persuade me to drop my idea. But you cannot keep a journalist
quiet. Even in a jail."
Aged 29 and the father of a four-month-old baby, Badal is accused by the
Criminal Bureau of Investigation (CBI) of having hired poachers to kill
leopards belonging to a protected species in the Saharanpur jungle in the
northern state of Uttar Pradesh so that it could be recorded on film. He has
claimed his innocence from the outset.
Since his arrest, he has been subjected to various forms of mistreatment. On
the first day, he was allegedly obliged to undress for a body search in
front of a dozen prison guards and dozens of inmates, most of them laughing
as they watched. He is being held in a prison wing intended to house 60
inmates which currently holds more than 250 in health-threatening
conditions.
Various factors suggest that the CBI was asked by the government to make
life difficult for Tehelka.com, which exposed a major corruption scandal
within the government in 2001. The other Tehelka.com journalist to have been
detained in the past month was Aniruddha Bahal, who heads its investigative
team. He was arrested on 7 August as a result of a complaint filed by a CBI
officer who accused him of having "threatened" him. Bahal was released on
bail the same day.
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016