Gujarat court rejects Rahul Gandhi’s plea to suspend defamation conviction

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Gujarat court rejects Rahul Gandhi’s plea to suspend defamation conviction

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Indias main opposition Congress party’s leader Rahul Gandhi holds a news conference after he was disqualified as a lawmaker by Indias parliament on Friday, at the party’s headquarters in New Delhi, India, March 25, 2023. — Reuters
India’s main opposition Congress party’s leader Rahul Gandhi holds a news conference after he was disqualified as a lawmaker by India’s parliament on Friday, at the party’s headquarters in New Delhi, India, March 25, 2023. — Reuters
  • Rahul will now approach the Supreme Court to seek relief.
  • The conviction is “just, proper and legal”, the court ruled.
  • Gandhi is second 2nd in India to be disqualified from parliament.

NEW DELHI: Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi will remain disqualified as a lawmaker after the Gujarat High Court rejected his plea to put on hold his conviction in a 2019 defamation case.

The conviction is “just, proper and legal”, the court ruled, in a blow to the Congress leader quashing, for now, his hope of returning to parliament and contesting national elections due next year.

Rahul will now approach the Supreme Court to seek relief — his last option.

Gandhi was convicted in March in a case brought by a Gujarat state lawmaker from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Purnesh Modi, after comments he made in 2019 were deemed to be insulting to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other people surnamed Modi.

“How come all thieves have the name Modi?,” Gandhi had asked in an election campaign speech, referring to two fugitive businessmen, both surnamed Modi.

Gandhi, the scion of a dynasty that has given India three prime ministers, was sentenced to two years imprisonment, but the jail term was put on hold, and he was given bail.

Gandhi also lost his parliamentary seat following the conviction since lawmakers sentenced to jail terms of two years or more are automatically disqualified.

They are also barred from running for election for six years after the end of the two-year jail term.

Gandhi has separately challenged the conviction in a district court, which is yet to hear the case.

Justice Hemant Prachchhak of the Gujarat High Court said in his order on Friday that a stay of conviction is not a rule but an exemption to be resorted to in rare cases.

“The refusal of stay of conviction would not in any way result in injustice to the applicant,” the judge said.

“There is no reasonable ground to stay the conviction of the applicant in view of the facts and circumstances of the case.”

There was no immediate response from Gandhi to the verdict.

Congress spokesperson Jairam Ramesh said the judgment would be studied. “The judgement only redoubles our resolve to pursue the matter further,” Ramesh tweeted.

During the hearing of the case, Gandhi’s lawyer Abhishek Singhvi had argued that the crime for which Gandhi had been convicted is not “serious” and not being allowed to contest elections for eight years is “virtually semi-permanent in politics”.

Gandhi was only the second lawmaker in India to be disqualified from parliament after being convicted. The other case was in January this year, but the lawmaker was subsequently reinstated.

Gandhi’s disqualification pushed India’s main opposition parties to sink their differences and join hands to plan a united challenge to BJP in the 2024 national elections.


— Additional input from Reuters

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