
The Madhya Pradesh High Court has dismissed a petition seeking prohibitory action against news reports that allegedly spread false and misleading information about Muslims and Islam, Live Law reported on Thursday.
The writ petition asked the court to order criminal action against the editors of two Hindi newspapers. The petition claimed that the newspapers used terms such as “love jihad” to hurt the religious sentiments of Muslims and spread communal hatred, the legal news outlet reported.
The petition also requested the court to issue guidelines to curb misleading and false information being circulated in print and electronic media against Muslims and Islam.
“Love jihad” is a Hindutva conspiracy theory that accuses Muslim men of being part of an organised plot to trick unsuspecting Hindu women into romantic relationships to ultimately convert them to Islam.
The Union home ministry has told Parliament that Indian law has no provision defining such a term.
The bench of Justice Vishal Mishra noted that demands in the petition were for issues that should have been filed as a public interest litigation, not as a mandamus plea. Since it was filed improperly, the petition was dismissed.
Mandamus is a court order issued by a higher court, commanding a lower court or a public official to perform a duty they are legally required to do.
During the...
Read more
-
Aditya Narayan On Udit Narayan’s Kissing Controversy: 'He Had No Idea About Consent'
-
India, Russia Discuss S-400 Delivery, Sukhoi Upgrades, And Defence Boost In Qingdao
-
BJP Names State Election Officers To Supervise Organisational Polls In Maharashtra, Uttarakhand, And West Bengal
-
IND vs ENG: Veteran cricketer gives BIG advice to Shubman Gill ahead of 2nd Test, says…
-
'Masterful' Netflix thriller that 'changed the game in storytelling' is finally back