Advertisement
X

Assam Writer Sikha Sarma Held For 'Sedition' Over Post On Jawan Killed In Chhattisgarh

The accused, Sikha Sarma, a Guwahati-based writer, was arrested under 'various sections, including IPC 124A (sedition)', Guwahati Police Commissioner Munna Prasad Gupta said.

Assam writer Sikha Sarma was arrested on the charge of sedition and sent to judicial custody for her alleged social media post on security personnel massacred by Maoists in Chhatisgarh.

On April 5, two days after the brutal killing of the security personnel, Sarma wrote on Facebook, "Salaried people cannot be termed martyrs if they die during duty. In that case, an electricity department employee will also be a martyr if he dies due to electrocution. Media do not make the people emotional,"

The post stirred controversy with over 11,000 comments and at least 1,600 shares on Facebook.

The police registered a case against Sarma under Sections 124A (sedition), 294A (keeping lottery office), 500 (defamation) and 506 (criminal intimidation) along with Section 45 (residuary penalty) of IT Act after receiving complaints from two BJP workers on Monday.

"She was arrested last night and today we produced her before the Kamrup (Metro) district court. We did not seek police custody. She has been sent to 14 days of judicial custody," Guwahati Police Commissioner Munna Prasad Gupta said.

On April 3, suspected Maoists killed 22 security personnel from different forces and wounded 31 others in an ambush in Chhattisgarh.

Out of them, two CRPF personnel – Inspector Dilip Kumar Das and Constable Babul Rabha who were killed hailed from Assam which had led to the public outpouring of grief in the state.

Earlier, Sarma had faced rape threats on social media over her regular posts against the ruling BJP in the state.

She had filed a complaint to the police on it and no action has been taken against anyone.

In 2017, the defence and home ministries had told the Central Information Commission in response to an RTI query that there was no term as "martyr" or "shaheed" in the Army or police and instead a soldier or a policeman killed in action was called a "battle casualty" or "operations casualty" respectively.

With PTI inputs

Show comments
US