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Prejudice, Pride And A Chopper Override: Why Abhijit Iyer-Mitra Is In Jail Since One Month

A man is in jail due to the CM’s fallout with a former partyman

Prejudice, Pride And A Chopper Override: Why Abhijit Iyer-Mitra Is In Jail Since One Month
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Delhi-based defence analyst Abhijit Iyer-­Mitra has completed one month in jail—for nothing more blasphemous than some ill-conceived, tasteless comments made in zest about Odisha, its people and some of its cultural icons. With the high court registry yet to list ­Abhijit’s bail petition, moved on ­Nov­ember 16, he is likely to cool his heels in jail at least until next week. The Odisha government too is under fire from sections of the Indian int­elligentsia over his arrest and continued incarceration.

“We moved the bail petition in the Orissa High Court on Friday,” Abhijit’s lawyer Nikhil Mehra tells Outlook over phone from New Delhi. “We have also prayed for early listing of the case. We are hopeful that it will be listed for hearing next week.”

While uncertainty looms over the hearing on the bail application, the defence analyst got some much-needed relief on another front when the privileges committee of the Odisha assembly ­decided to act “magnanimous” and acc­epted his “unconditional and unreserved” apology. “In view of the above, the committee recommends that the august house may be mag­nanimous to consider and accept the apology begged by Shri Abhijit Iyer-Mitra for his statement before the media against the hon’ble members of this august house and drop the matter,” the privileges committee said in its verdict on November 17. In an interview to Odia TV channel News 7 in New Delhi at the height of the controversy, Abhijit had called members of the Odisha assembly “buddu”.

While Abhijit can breathe just a little easier after the pardon by the committee, it would be of little help in securing him bail. Narasingha Mishra, leader of Opposition and chairman of the committee, believes it would have no bearing in the police case against him. “They are two entirely different and unconnected matters. It is now for the high court to decide strictly on the merits of the case whether he deserves bail, whenever his bail plea is taken up for hearing. I don’t think the pardon by the committee would have any bearing on the court’s verdict,” Mishra tells Outlook.     

Observers believe that the Odisha government and the police, which were rel­entless in their pursuit of this ‘Public Enemy No. 1’ in the initial stages, may not pursue the case with the same vigour they displayed while arr­esting Abhijit. “Now that the government has achieved the political objective it had set out to achieve in the first place, it may not pursue the case any further,” says veteran journalist Rabi Das. “But it’s for the high court to take a call. The state government is beginning to realise that Abhijit’s ­arrest and his long incarceration is earning it a bad name in liberal circles, and hence it may back off now.”

One has to go deep into the ‘political purpose’ that Das talks about to find out why Abhijit’s repeated apologies were good enough for the privileges committee, but not for the government, which hadn’t even bothered registering an FIR when former Supreme Court judge Justice Markandeya Katju made a similarly ‘humorous’ and tasteless comment about Odias last year. Abhijit too had made fun of Odisha in a series of tweets last year. But that did not attract any censure until former Biju Janata Dal (BJD) MP Baijayant ‘Jay’ Panda, who has now had a bitter fallout with Odisha CM Naveen Patnaik, took him on a helicopter ride.

Panda had been crisscrossing the state to campaign against Naveen in recent months and the CM, looking to ground Panda, seized upon the opportunity. The police first registered an FIR against Panda for “violating a no-fly zone” over Chilika lake and seized all three helicopters of his family-run com­pany, the IMFA Group. The helicopters stayed grounded for weeks until the civil aviation authority cleared Panda of any violation.

Just as the government was beginning to realise there were far too many loose ends in the case against Panda since Chilika wasn’t covered by the no-fly zone, a video that Abhijit made while visiting Konark temple later came in handy. Though Panda did not accompany Abhijit to Konark, his jokes against temples in Odisha were trumpeted as an assault on Odia culture and tradition. Panda was made to bear the embarrassment for hosting him. The Odisha Police also booked Abhijit for his last year’s tweets, acting on a complaint that he had caused outrage and threatened social harmony. It didn’t matter that one of the tweets had garnered only seven likes.

The case against Abhijit also served another useful purpose for the BJD sup­remo. It provided an opportunity to the Odia-challenged chief minister to refurbish his Odia credentials. Canny politician that he is, Naveen was quick to realise that this was an issue on which the Opposition can ill afford to oppose the government since it involved Odia pride and sentiment. Even the journalistic fraternity in the state, barring a few honourable exceptions like Kedar Mishra, largely chose to swim with the tide rather than stand up for free speech. “After Abhijit Iyer-Mitra says sorry, there is no point in witch-hunting,” Mishra said in a Facebook post on October 25.

Even the privileges committee did not lose the opportunity to make a political point while accepting Abhijit’s apology. In its final report, the committee made a reference to “some people” who accompanied him during his visit to Odisha in September and emphasised the point that “before accompanying a person from outside Odisha to show him places of interest in the state, he should have been told about the rich culture of Odisha, and about its different monuments and historical background by ‘the person’ who gave him a lift and accompanied him.” There are no prizes for guessing who this “person” was!   

Reports emerging out of the Jharpada jail suggest Abhijit hardly eats anything and has lost about 10 kilos over the days he has been in jail. “He just watches TV and waves to jail officials with a wry smile,” says a jail official, who would rather remain anonymous. The man, who revelled in his role as provocateur at large all these years, is a shadow of his once ebullient self. With no certainty about when he would finally walk free, the academic may emerge a mental wreck whenever he comes out of jail.

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Glib Smacked

Defence analyst Abhijit Iyer-Mitra

Photograph by Sanjib Mukherjee

No Country for Free Speech

  • On March 21, 2017, within hours of Yogi Adityanath’s swearing-in as UP CM, at least four persons were arrested from various parts of the state for Facebook posts critical of him. A woman from Banagalore was also named in an FIR for the same reason.
  • In August 2014, CPI(M) worker Rajeesh Kumar was arrested in Kerala for posting “abusive” comments and memes on Facebook about PM Narendra Modi.
  • In May 2014, ship-building professional Devu Chodankar was arrested in Goa for a Facebook comment on Modi that the police described as part of a “larger gameplan to promote communal and social disharmony in the state”.
  • In November 2012, Shaheen Dhada and Renu Srinivasan from Palghar, Mumbai, were arrested for “hurting religious sentiments” with a Facebook post asking why the city was shut down for Shiv Sena leader Bal Thackeray’s funeral. One of the girls was arrested just for ‘liking’ the post. All the charges were quashed.
  • In October 2012, businessman Ravi Srinivasan was arrested in Pondicherry for allegedly tweeting “offensive” messages about Karti Chidambaram, son of then FM P. Chidambaram.
  • In May 2012, the Mumbai police arrested Air India cabin crew members Mayank Mohan Sharma and K.V.J. Rao for allegedly insulting the national flag and sharing indecent jokes about then PM Manmohan Singh and other politicians. The charges were dropped months later.
  • In April 2012, Jadavpur University professor Ambikesh Mahapatra and Subrata Sengupta were arrested for emailing a cartoon based on a scene from Satyajit Ray’s movie Sonar Kella that made fun of Bengal CM Mamta Banerjee. Three years later, the high court asked the state government to pay Rs 50,000 to Mahapatra and Sengupta.

By Sandeep Sahu in Bhubaneswar