The Lucknow police on Thursday registered a case against former AMU student Sharjeel Usmani. The FIR against him includes a charge of sedition. This development came a day after Maharastra police booked Usmani for allegedly hurting the religious sentiments of people with his remarks at the Elgar Parishad conclave in Pune.
Lucknow police said on Thursday, the case was registered against Usmani on Wednesday night at the Hazratganj police station in Lucknow on the complaint of a city resident Anurag Singh.
Singh has alleged in his complaint that Usmani used provocative words and language in his speech at Elgar Parishad conclave on January 30 in Pune with an aim to trigger hatred and anger against the UP government and promoting enmity among various religious communities.
On Singh’s complaint, an FIR has been lodged against Usmani under sections 124A, 153 A and 505 (1) (B) of the IPC for allegedly committing sedition, promoting communal hatred and making statements aimed at alarming people and inciting them to commit offences against the state, a senior police official said.
Earlier on Tuesday, the Pune police had booked Usmani under section 153 A for allegedly promoting enmity between different groups of people on the ground of religion.
A day after the registration of the FIR against Usmani in Pune, Maharashtra Home Minister Anil Deshmukh had on Wednesday said the former AMU student leader would be arrested from whichever state he is in.
He had said the police booked Usmani, an Uttar Pradesh resident, for his "offensive remarks" after conducting a probe into the video clippings of the January 30 conclave in Pune.
During the conclave, writer-activist Arundhati Roy, Justice (Retd) B G Kolse Patil and former IPS officer S M Mushrif were also among those who addressed the gathering.
Three years ago, several Left-leaning activists were arrested by police for alleged Naxal links following the December 31, 2017, Elgar Parishad conclave and the caste violence at Pune's Koregaon-Bhima war memorial the next day.
With PTI inputs