Indian author Arundhati Roy may face prosecution for 2010 speech on Kashmir[AJ]

Indian author Arundhati Roy may face prosecution for 2010 speech on Kashmir

The New Delhi government approves for the case to proceed before the courts for speech allegedly advocating the secession of Kashmir from India.

[This article was originally published by Al Jazeera on October 10, 2023]

Arundhati Roy
Roy became the first non-expatriate Indian to win the Booker Prize for her debut novel, The God of Small Things, in 1997 [File: Anthony Wallace/AFP]

Published On 10 Oct 2023

Booker Prize-winning Indian novelist Arundhati Roy could be prosecuted for a 2010 speech about Indian-administered Kashmir after a top official signed off on the move, reports say.

Roy, 61, is one of India’s most famous living authors, but her writing and activism, including her trenchant criticism of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, has made her a polarising figure at home.

A criminal complaint accusing her and several others of sedition had languished in India’s notoriously glacial criminal justice system since it was first filed in 2010.

But on Tuesday, Indian media reported that VK Saxena, the top official in the administration governing New Delhi, had given approval for the case to proceed before the courts.

Saxena’s directive said there was enough evidence for a case to proceed against Roy and Sheikh Showkat Hussain, former professor of international law at Central University of Kashmir, “for their speeches at a public function” in the capital, local media reports said.

The original complaint accused Roy and others of giving speeches advocating the secession of Kashmir from India, which partly governs the disputed region and claims it in full, along with neighbouring Pakistan.

Kashmir is one of the most sensitive topics of public discussion in India, which has fought two wars and countless skirmishes with Pakistan over control of the Himalayan territory.

Tens of thousands of people, including Indian troops, fighters and civilians, have been killed in Indian-administered Kashmir since a rebellion against Indian rule broke out in 1989.

Roy’s home in New Delhi was besieged by protesters in 2010 when her remarks from the panel discussion became public.

Two of her codefendants – Kashmiri separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Syed Abdul Rahman Geelani, a Delhi University lecturer – died in the 13 years since the case was first lodged.

Roy became the first non-expatriate Indian to win the prestigious Booker Prize for her acclaimed debut novel, The God of Small Things, in 1997.

She is also known for her passionate essays on the plight of the poor and dispossessed in India, occasionally earning the ire of the country’s elite.

In recent years, her work has marked her as one of the most high-profile critics of Modi’s government, which has been accused by rights groups and others of targeting activists for criminal prosecution and working to suppress free speech.

Reporters Without Borders warns “press freedom is in crisis” in India. Since 2014, India dropped from 140 to 161 on its rankings of media freedom, including 11 places since last year.

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