The recent brouhaha over a meeting in Delhi on ‘Azadi’ for Kashmir has brought into focus the deep fractures within the Indian polity. Sensing some political advantage, the Bharatiya Janata Party has pressed for sedition charges against two of the speakers, the lugubrious, hardline Kashmiri leader, Syed Ali Shah Geelani and the Cassandra-like writer, Arundhati Roy. The prospect of the arrest of these individuals for the crime of spreading disaffection against the Indian state has passed. However, the not-so-subtle threat against dissenters is ever present. Admittedly, there is very little that is commendable of Geelani and there is much to disagree with in the recent writings and utterances of Arundhati Roy. However, the threat of arrest in the current circumstances is an affront to India’s democratic values. While the implications of this episode are significant, there is a historical dimension to the story that merits attention.