NewsClick case: Delhi court sends Prabir Purkayastha, Amit Chakraborty to 10 days of judicial custody

The court passed the order after Purkayastha and Chakraborty were produced in court on the expiry of their five days of police custody.

BySouth First Desk

Published Oct 10, 2023 | 8:19 PMUpdatedOct 10, 2023 | 8:19 PM

A protest in solidarity with NewsClick in New York, USA. (X)

A Delhi Court on Tuesday, 10 October, sent NewsClick founder Prabir Purkayastha and Human Resources head Amit Chakraborty to 10 days of judicial custody in the UAPA case registered against them following allegations of taking money to spread Chinese propaganda.

The court passed the order after Purkayastha and Chakraborty were produced in court on the expiry of their five days of police custody.

The two were produced before Additional Sessions Judge Hardeep Kaur around 2.50 pm.

The prosecution sought 10 days judicial custody for the duo, which was firmly opposed by Purkayastha’s counsel, who asserted no case was made out against his client.

The counsel for Chakravarty argued he was not a journalist nor had he received any payment.

Related: NewsClick rejects allegations in FIR as untenable and bogus

Questioned 25 journalists

Earlier in the day, Delhi Police Special Cell questioned about 25 journalists and contributors of the NewsClick for a second time.

An officer said that the investigation into the case is still on and no one has been given the clean chit so far.

About 46 people, including nine women journalists, were questioned on 3 October, the day the Special Cell raided several locations connected to the news website in Delhi and NCR.

“Since the arrest took place, everyone was called for the second round of questioning. About 25 of them have appeared so far,” said a police officer.

The Delhi High Court had reserved on Monday an order on their pleas. “Arguments heard. Order reserved,” said Justice Tushar Rao Gedela.

‘False’, ‘bogus’ allegations

Purkayastha had told the Delhi High Court that the allegations against him were “false” and “bogus”, and “not a penny has come from China”.

Solicitor General (SG) Tushar Mehta, appearing for the investigation agency, said that the case involved “serious offences” and the probe was still going on.

“About ₹75 crore odd…investigation is on and I can show it from the case diary… came from a person staying in China and the purpose is to ensure that the stability and especially the integrity of this country is compromised,” he said.

“One of the most serious allegations found in the e-mail exchanges between accused persons with somebody sitting in China is that we will prepare a map where we will show J&K and what we call Arunachal Pradesh…they use the expression which Chinese use, namely ‘northern border of India’, and not show that (Arunachal) to be a part of India,” SG Mehta told the court.

Related: HC says remand order passed without hearing lawyers of the arrested

‘All facts are false’

Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, representing Purkayastha, refuted the claim.

“All facts are false. Not a penny has come from China…The whole thing is bogus,” Sibal said.

Sibal and senior advocate Dayan Krishnan contended their arrest and remand in the present case cannot be sustained on several legal counts, including that they were not told about the grounds of arrest at the time of arrest or even to date.

The remand order was passed by the trial court in a mechanical manner, in the absence of their lawyers, they said.

Remand copy

An official said that the gadgets taken from the journalists were sent to the FSL (Forensic Science Lab) for examination and extraction of any content related to the matter.

According to the Delhi Police’s remand copy, which was submitted before the court on 4 October when it produced Purkayastha and Chakravarty, the analysis of the e-mails shows that Neville Roy Singham, Prabir Purkayastha, and Amit Chakravarty were in direct touch with each other and were found to be discussing how to create a map of India without Kashmir and to show Arunachal Pradesh as a disputed area.

“To achieve the above objective the accused persons in the guise of foreign funds received money of more than Prabir ₹115 crore in the companies named as PPK NewsClick, GSPAN India, JJ Enterprises, Virtunet System,” stated the remand copy.

The Delhi Police had in the matter registered a case under sections 13, 16, 17,18 and 22 of the anti-terror Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act invoked and sections 153A (promoting enmity between two groups) and 120B (criminal conspiracy) of the Indian Penal Code on 17 August.

Interview: Government showing journalists what it is capable: Paranjoy Thakurta

The arrest

The police searched more than 30 locations and questioned several dozen journalists on 3 October in connection with the case. They were allowed to go after questioning that, in some cases, extended to over six hours.

Among those questioned were journalists Urmilesh, Aunindyo Chakravarty, Abhisar Sharma, Paranjoy Guha Thakurta as well as historian Sohail Hashmi, satirist Sanjay Rajoura, and D Raghunandan of the Centre for Technology & Development.

Meanwhile, Pranjoy Guha Thakurtha, one among the questioned, told South First, “They couldn’t get him (Prabir) under the PMLA (Prevention of Money Laundering Act), the FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) or the Income Tax Act, so finally they got him under police custody under UAPA.”

“I haven’t seen the FIR. It is said that the FIR was launched on 17 August. So almost a month-and-a-half later, all these things happened. It is sending a chilling… message to all journalists that this is what the government is capable of doing,” he said.

“They don’t want independent critical journalism to continue in this country. That’s the only conclusion I can draw,” Guha Thakurta added.

Prominent journalists’ bodies, including the Indian Women’s Press Corps (IWPC), Press Club of India, and Digipub News India Foundation, have sought the intervention of Chief Justice of India (CJI) DY Chandrachud in the matter.

(With PTI inputs)