A look back into the history of the sedition law in the post-colonial Indian state reveals a complex web of the complicity of all three branches of the government with regard to its continuance and misuse in the criminalisation of free speech and dissent. So much so that, in May 2022, in S.G.Vombatkere v Union of India, after recognising that a crescendo has reached, the Supreme Court of India had to finally put the operation of Section 124A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) dealing with sedition on hold. Even as the Court’s move was criticised by many for not referring the matter to a larger Constitution Bench to determine its constitutionality, the suspension of the provision was seen as a progressive step to prevent its further misuse.