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Hate speech

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March 31, 2017

Why in news?

The Law Commission of India has drafted a new law, the Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill, 2017, inserting new sections to fortify democracy against hate speeches.

What does the Law Commission Report say?

  • Hate speech is an incitement to hatred against a particular group of persons marginalised by their religious belief, sexual orientation, gender, and so on.
  • The Commission, in its 267th report on hate speech, said such utterances have the potential to provoke individuals and society to commit acts of terrorism, genocide, and ethnic cleansing.
  • The Commission has proposed Section 153C, which penalises incitement to hatred, where a guilty person with two years’ imprisonment, or Rs. 5,000 in fine, or both.
  • Section 505A, which for the first time makes “causing fear, alarm, or provocation of violence in certain cases” a specific criminal offence.
  • Section 505A provides a punishment of one year imprisonment, or Rs. 5,000 in fine, or both.
  • Offensive speech has real and devastating effects on people’s lives and risks their health and safety. It is harmful and divisive for communities and hampers social progress.
  • The commission also warned that if left unchecked, hate speech can severely affect right to life of every individual.
  • It said even a speech that does not incite violence has the potential of marginalising a section of society, thus contradicting popular legal and judicial concepts about the ambit of hate speech.
  • Incitement to violence cannot be the sole test for determining whether a speech amounts to hate speech or not.
  • Even speech that does not incite violence has the potential of marginalising a certain section of the society or individual.
  • It also pointed out that in the age of technology; the anonymity of the Internet allows a miscreant to easily spread false and offensive ideas.
  • These ideas need not always incite violence but they might perpetuate the discriminatory attitudes prevalent in the society.  Thus, incitement to discrimination is also a significant factor that contributes to the identification of hate speech.

 

Source: The Hindu

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