These two articles report the arrest of 22-year-old Indian climate activist Disha Ravi, who has been accused of sedition for allegedly authoring a pro-famers toolkit Global Farmers Strike - First Wave. The first article deals with her arrest, while the second provides the context of India’s Sedition Law and its contemporary use to silence dissent and freedom of expression. Lawyers for Ms. Ravi say she was arrested illegally. Links to the toolkit are provided below—ed.

Disha Ravi: Indian activist arrested illegally over farmers protest support, her lawyers say

Sky News

18 February 2021

Disha Ravi, an environmental activist who is part of an organisation founded by climate change campaigner Greta Thunberg, was arrested on Saturday for allegedly creating and sharing an online document that supported the months-long farmers` protests around Delhi.

She has been accused of sedition - a charge punishable by life in prison - and was brought before a New Delhi court on Sunday, without prior notice to her family or counsel, according to legal documents filed on Thursday.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi`s government has been widely criticised for using heavy-handed tactics to counter the demonstrations, which have seen tens of thousands of protesting farmers camped on the outskirts of Delhi since last year.

Police, who arrested Ms Ravi in Bengaluru, said the document, spread misinformation about the protests and tarnished the image of India.

Authorities say the document, which was shared by Ms Thunburg on Twitter, was authored by Ms Ravi and two others with the backing of supporters of a separatist group.

They allege it contained plans for widening the protests and spreading violence.

Farmer protests: India`s sedition law used to muffle dissent

Shruti Menon, BBC Reality Check

8 February 2021

The charges recently filed against a young Indian protester under a law [that] prohibits inciting disaffection against the government has focused attention on a highly controversial colonial-era statute.

So, what is the law that has been used against 22-year-old Disha Ravi, and is its use on the increase in India?

What’s the sedition law?

This is a section of the Indian Penal Code which criminalises any action that excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the government.

The punishment can be a fine or a maximum sentence of life in prison, or both.

The law has been invoked for the liking or sharing of a social media post, drawing a cartoon or even the staging of a school play.

It dates back to the 1870s, when India was under British rule. Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Iran, Uzbekistan, Sudan, Senegal and Turkey also have legislation against sedition.

A form of sedition law also exists in the United States, but freedoms of speech enshrined in the US Constitution mean that it`s rarely invoked.

The United Kingdom abolished sedition and seditious libel in 2009 after a protracted

legal campaign against such laws.

Rise in sedition charges in India

In the last five years, the number of sedition cases filed against individuals has risen by an average of at least 28% each year, according to data collected by Article14, a group of lawyers, journalists and academics.

India`s official National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) didn`t began reporting sedition cases as a separate category until 2014.

And the number of cases reported by them is lower than those reported by Article14 because not every instance of sedition is recorded as such.

Lubhyathi Rangarajan, who oversees the database at Article14, says the group looks in detail at court documents and police reports to check exactly what charges were made.

The NCRB works on the principal offence method, which means if there is a crime [involving sedition] which also includes either rape or murder, then the case will be classified under that offence.

But both data sets show upward trends. [See graphic on this pageed.]

The Article14 database found that five states - Bihar, Karnataka, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu - accounted for nearly two-thirds of all sedition cases in the last decade.

These are cases lodged by both the central and state governments.

Some are states affected by India`s long-running internal conflict with Maoist guerrillas.

But the data also shows that the increase in recent years is linked to civilian protest movements, such as the current farmers` protests, as well as protests last year over changes to citizenship laws and over the gang rape of a Dalit woman in Uttar Pradesh.

Why is sedition being used?

There have been legal rulings and observations made by the Indian courts questioning the use of sedition laws.

A Delhi court said earlier in February that sedition could not be invoked to quieten any disquiet under the pretence of muzzling miscreants, and bailed two men who had allegedly shared fake videos.

India`s top court has also stated that charges of sedition cannot be made unless the accused incites people to violence against the government, or with the intention of creating public disorder.

Official data shows that the conviction rate for sedition has actually dropped, from 33% of cases in 2014 to 3% in 2019.

Senior lawyer Colin Gonsalves, who has challenged the validity of the sedition law, says it is being used as an intimidation tactic.

The state is terrorising young people by using the law and putting them behind bars.

Mr Gonsalves says the process itself is the punishment, rather than a trial or a conviction.

Tom Vadakkan, national spokesperson of the ruling BJP, defends the use of the law.

We are a country that believes in non-violence, but if there are elements that provoke and create conditions that affect the image of this country, this law is still relevant, he says.

As for the low conviction rate, he says: In many of these cases, there`s not enough evidence. Sometimes it`s difficult to get to the bottom of it.

Cartoonist Aseem Trivedi - arrested for sedition by a Congress-led government in 2011 and then freed after protests - says things look different today.

I just got lucky, he says. If I hadn`t received widespread support, I would have had to spend the rest of my life fighting the case and spending all my money on it.

I am certain that [today] the charges would not have been dropped, I would have had to fight inside and outside the courts to defend myself.

Original article

Photo on front page: People hold placards and pictures of Disha Ravi during a protest in Bengaluru, 15 February 2021. Source: Samuel Rajkumar/Reuters. Image on this page: Graphic showing sedition cases filed in India in the past decade. Source: Article 14/BBC.

Download the Global Farmers Strike - First Wave (SCHEDULE & LINKS).

The toolkit lists five key onward links as “More Information”:

Link 1 lead to a website Kisaan Ekta Co. (Farmers United) that is run by a volunteer group of people in the UK, USA and Canada who are keen about the entire issue that is affecting the Indian agricultural community.

Link 2 was about ASoverignWorld.com with an anchor text – A Protest and Divest Adani, Ambani

Link 3 – AskIndiaWhy (dot com) – the site is currently unavailable

Link 4 – Trolley Times (Farmers at the borders’ Newsweekly) – The data on this site is in Punjabi

Link 5 – List of Farmer Deaths at Delhi borders via a Blogspot article.

Themes
• Accompanying social processes
• Advocacy
• Agriculture
• Climate change
• Communication and dissemination
• Coordination
• Discrimination
• Displacement
• Epidemics, diseases
• ESC rights
• Farmers/Peasants
• Financialization
• Food (rights, sovereignty, crisis)
• Forced evictions
• Grassroots initiatives
• Land rights
• Landless
• Legal frameworks
• Livelihoods
• Low income
• National
• Networking
• Public policies
• Public programs and budgets
• Rural planning
• Solidarity campaign
• Tenants
• Urgent actions