Supreme Court Adjourns Bail Plea Of Bhima Koregaon Case Accused Jyoti Jagtap To July

Debby Jain & Gyanvi Khanna

16 May 2024 6:33 AM GMT

  • Supreme Court Adjourns Bail Plea Of Bhima Koregaon Case Accused Jyoti Jagtap To July

    The Supreme Court today (on May 16) has adjourned the bail plea of activist and Bhima Koregaon case accused Jyoti Jagtap to July. It may be noted that the plea for interim bail was listed before the three-judge Bench of Justices Sanjiv Khanna, MM Sundresh, and Bela M Trivedi yesterday. However, it was re-listed for today. Today, the matter was before the Bench of Justices MM...

    The Supreme Court today (on May 16) has adjourned the bail plea of activist and Bhima Koregaon case accused Jyoti Jagtap to July.  It may be noted that the plea for interim bail was listed before the three-judge Bench of Justices Sanjiv Khanna, MM Sundresh, and Bela M Trivedi yesterday. However, it was re-listed for today.

    Today, the matter was before the Bench of Justices MM Sundresh and SVN Bhatti. However, when it was called out for hearing, the Bench expressed its inability to finish the hearing today. Accordingly, the hearing was adjourned to July. The Supreme Court is closing for summer vacations tomorrow (May 17) and will reopen on July 8. 

    Under the scanner is Jagtap's challenge to a Bombay High Court order vide which her bail application was rejected. She has been lodged in jail since September 2020 for offences under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 after being arrested in connection with the 2018 caste-based violence that broke out at Bhima Koregaon in Pune, and for having alleged links with the proscribed far-left outfit, Communist Party of India (Maoists).

    It is worthwhile to mention that another Bhima Koregaon case accused - activist and journalist Gautam Navlakha - was granted bail by the top Court on May 14, subject to the payment of Rs.20 lacs for his house arrest. Navlakha was arrested on April 14, 2020. The Bombay High Court had granted him bail, noting that there was no material to infer that he committed a terrorist act, but stayed the order for 3 weeks to enable NIA to challenge the same. This stay was extended by the Supreme Court from time to time, and ultimately lifted yesterday.

    The bench, led by Justice Sundresh and comprising Justice SVN Bhatti, noted that Navlakha has been incarcerated for over 4 years and the trial would take years for completion.

    Prior to that, on April 5, a Supreme Court bench of Justices Aniruddha Bose and Augustine George Masih granted bail to former Nagpur University professor Shoma Sen, who was also booked under the UAPA for alleged Maoist links, in connection with the Bhima Koregaon case. Sen was arrested on June 6, 2018 and was in custody since then, awaiting trial. While passing the order, the bench took into account Sen's advanced age (with several ailments), prolonged incarceration, delay in commencement of trial and nature of accusations.

    Jyoti Jagtap, an activist and member of cultural organization 'Kala Kabir Manch', and 16 others was accused by the National Investigation Agency of being responsible for the caste violence at Bhima Koregaon in Pune.

    The Pune police (and later NIA) contended that inflammatory speeches at Elgar Parishad – an event to commemorate the two hundredth anniversary of the Battle of Koregaon Bhima – triggered the violent clashes that broke out between Maratha and Dalit groups near the village of Bhima Koregaon in Maharashtra.

    This led to the arrest of 16 activists for allegedly conspiring and planning the violence. They were charged with various provisions of the UAPA based on letters and emails primarily retrieved from their electronic devices.

    In February, 2022, a special NIA court rejected Jagtap's bail application, which was later upheld by the Bombay High Court in October. While rejecting her application, a division bench of the high court observed that dialogues in Kabir Kala Manch's plays that ridiculed words/phrases like 'Ram Mandir', 'Gomutra', and 'Acche Din' – aimed at the democratically elected government – incited hatred and indicated a larger conspiracy. To quote the bench:

    “There are a number of innuendos in the text, words, and performance of Kabir Kala Manch which are pointed directly against the democratically elected government, for seeking to overthrow the government, ridicule the government…Kabir Kala Manch admittedly performed and incited hatred and passion by performing on the above agenda in the Elgar Parishad event. There is thus definitely a larger conspiracy within the Elgar Parishad conspiracy by Kabir Kala Manch and Communist Party of India (Maoist).”

    The High Court was of the view that NIA's contention regarding Jagtap having conspired, attempted, advocated and abated the commission of a terrorist act was prima facie true. “The Elgar Parishad event is thus a smaller conspiracy within the larger design and conspiracy of CPI (Maoist) to further its agenda…It is also seen that CPI (Maoist) has chalked out a detailed strategy for furtherance of its objective to overthrow the democratically elected government of our country and the Appellant and other co-accused are prima facie actively strategising the same,” it held.

    Case Details: Jyoti Jagtap v. National Investigation Agency & Anr. | Special Leave Petition (Criminal) No. 5997 of 2023

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