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SC mulls clubbing FIRs against Sharjeel Imam, transferring them to Delhi

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File picture of Sharjeel Imam. | Photo Credit: Reuters

File picture of Sharjeel Imam. | Photo Credit: Reuters

The Supreme Court on Tuesday (April 29, 2025) made oral observations in favour of clubbing sedition FIRs registered across multiple States against former Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) student Sharjeel Imam and transferring them to Delhi.

The court remarked that all the cases arose from one speech and dealt with the same offence.

A Bench headed by Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna said multiple and parallel trials would lead to “double jeopardy” and set a bad precedent leading to “huge difficulties” in the future.

“It is the same speech leading to the same offence in all the cases. The same speech was reheard across the country on social media platforms like YouTube,” Chief Justice Khanna addressed Additional Solicitor General S.V. Raju, appearing for the NCT of Delhi.

Also read | Supreme Court tells Delhi HC to hear Sharjeel Imam’s bail plea expeditiously

The Chief Justice asked if Mr. Imam was convicted in Delhi, would he be “convicted again and again and again in the other States for the same offence”.

Besides Delhi, Mr. Imam is facing FIRs in the States of Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh.

Mr. Raju argued against the clubbing and transferring of the cases to Delhi. He said the court in Delhi had already taken the evidemce of 22 witnesses.

The CJI then suggested staying the trial proceedings in the other four States till the one in Delhi was completed.

Mr. Raju said the speech delivered by Mr. Imam may be the same, but the mobs instigated by him were different in different States. “The speech may be the same, but the offences registered against him in each State is different, calling for separate trials,” Mr. Raju contended.

Senior advocate Siddharth Dave, for Mr. Imam, said his client cannot be dragged half way across the country, from one State to the other to face trial for the same speech.

Also read | A riot of emotions: memories of the 2020 Delhi violence

“Look at the type of speech you gave… That Assam should be separated from India…” Mr. Raju interjected.

“I may have given the worst speech. But you cannot take away my right to the rule of the law,” Mr. Dave shot back. He said by Mr. Raju’s logic “a person could face 500 different FIRs across the country, 500 different prosecutions, 500 different custody for giving one speech”.

The court listed Mr. Imam’s application, which dates back to 2020, after two weeks.

The Delhi Police had booked Mr. Imam under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA). On January 28, 2020, he was arrested by the Delhi Police’s Crime Branch from Bihar’s Jehanabad in a sedition case for allegedly making inflammatory speeches in the Jamia Millia Islamia University and Aligarh Muslim University.

The former student at the JNU’s Centre for Historical Studies was booked on sedition and other charges after purported videos of his alleged inflammatory speeches made during protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act were circulated on social media.

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Man stabbed to death in Red Hills

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A 22-year-old man was stabbed to death in broad daylight by a gang of four in Red Hills area of Nampally on Thursday.

The deceased, Ayan Qureshi, a resident of Hafeez Baba Nagar, was reportedly ambushed near Niloufer Hospital while returning home after a court appearance, said an officer from Nampally police.

“He was previously an accused in his uncle’s murder case and was a juvenile at the time of the offence. According to his father, Mohd Isha Qureshi, the family suspects that the attack may have been carried out by persons connected to that murder case,” said the officer.

Ayan was riding a scooter when he was waylaid by the gang. Armed with knives and daggers, the assailants launched a vicious assault, inflicting multiple stab wounds. Ayan succumbed to his injuries on the spot.

A case has been registered and efforts are on to identify and apprehend the culprits.

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Belagavi police arrest 4 persons for idgah desecration

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Members of some Muslim organisations protest against alleged desecration of holy books in Santi Bastawad village in Belagavi district, on May 12, 2025.

Members of some Muslim organisations protest against alleged desecration of holy books in Santi Bastawad village in Belagavi district, on May 12, 2025.
| Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

Belagavi police arrest four persons in connection with the alleged desecration of an idgah (open air space for prayers) in Santi Bastawad village. The alleged incident took place in April.

Officers arrested Laxman Yallappa Uchawade, 30, Muttappa Bharma Uchawade, 26, Laxman Nagappa Naik, 30, and Shivaraj Yallappa Gudli, 29. They all hail from the same village.

They face charges of damaging four gumbazs (domes) of the idgah, desecration of some graves and name plates.

Police Commissioner Iada Martin Marbaniang told reporters that the accused had confessed to the crime. Investigation officers have found evidence, he added.

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Justice Bela M. Trivedi, eleventh woman judge in Supreme Court history, bids adieu

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Justice Bela M. Trivedi. File photo: www.sci.gov.in

Justice Bela M. Trivedi. File photo: www.sci.gov.in

Justice Bela M. Trivedi, who was the eleventh woman judge to be elevated to the Supreme Court in its 75-year-old history on Friday demitted office after spending three-and-a-half years on the bench.

Justice Trivedi, who had the rare distinction of being elevated to the top court after starting out as a trial court judge in Gujarat in July 1995, was part of the top court’s several landmark judgements.

“It was a happy coincidence that her father was already working as the judge, city civil and sessions court when she was appointed. The Limca Book of Indian records has recorded the entry in their 1996 edition that ‘Father – daughter judges in the same court’,” Justice Trivedi’s profile on the apex court website said.

She was elevated as a judge of the apex court on August 31, 2021 when a record nine new judges, including three women, were administered oath of office.

On Friday, Justice Trivedi sat in the ceremonial bench headed by Chief Justice B R Gavai as a tradition marking the exit of a top court judge.

She was part of a five-judge Constitution bench, which by a 3:2 majority, in November 2022 upheld 10 per cent reservation introduced in 2019 for economically weaker sections in admissions and government jobs that excluded the poor among the SC/ST/OBC categories.

A seven-judge Constitution bench, which Justice Trivedi was part of, in August 2024 by a 6:1 majority held that states are constitutionally empowered to make sub-classifications within the Scheduled Castes, which form a socially heterogeneous class, for granting reservation for the uplift of castes that are socially and educationally more backward among them.

Justice Trivedi, in her 85-page dissenting verdict, said it is only Parliament which can include a caste in the SC list or exclude it, and states are not empowered to tinker with it.

A bench comprising Justice Trivedi in November 2021 said touching genitals of a child or any act involving physical contact with “sexual intent” amounts to sexual assault under Section 7 of the POCSO Act as the most important ingredient is sexual intent and not skin-to-skin contact.

It quashed the controversial “skin-to-skin” judgements of the Bombay High Court in two cases under the POCSO Act.

Justice Trivedi penned a verdict holding that the moratorium imposed under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code does not prohibit the attachment of properties under the Maharashtra Protection of Interest of Depositors Act.

A bench headed by Justice Trivedi on May 15 paved way for a Uttar Pradesh government scheme to develop the Shri Banke Bihari Temple corridor in Mathura for the benefit of scores of devotees.

Born on June 10, 1960 at Patan in north Gujarat, she practised as a lawyer in the Gujarat High Court for about 10 years.

She was appointed as a judge, city civil and sessions court at Ahmedabad, on July 10, 1995.

She had worked on different posts like registrar vigilance in the high court and law secretary in the Government of Gujarat.

She was elevated as a judge of the Gujarat High Court on February 17, 2011.

Justice Trivedi was transferred to the Rajasthan High Court where she worked since June 2011 till she was repatriated to the parent high court in February 2016.

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