SC Guidelines vs Adani Gag Order: Free Speech and Defamation Cases

Adani Gag Order

Adani Gag Order Latest News

  • Recently, a lower court issued a sweeping ex-parte gag order restraining several journalists, including Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, from publishing allegedly defamatory content against Adani Enterprises Limited (AEL). 
  • The order also directed removal of numerous articles and social media posts. 
  • Following this, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting issued takedown notices, resulting in the removal of 138 YouTube videos and 83 Instagram posts — some being satire or indirect references to Adani.

SC Guidelines on Defamation Injunctions

  • The Bonnard Standard
    • The Supreme Court follows the Bonnard principle (1891, Bonnard vs Perryman).
    • It states that a court can grant an injunction only when it is satisfied that the defendant may not be able to justify the defamation, and not merely when it suspects defamation.
  • SC’s Bloomberg Ruling (2024)
    • In 2024, the SC applied this principle while overturning an ex parte injunction ordering Bloomberg to take down an article on Zee Entertainment. 
    • The Court stressed that pre-trial injunctions should be rare, granted only when withholding them would cause “greater injustice.”
  • Supreme Court’s Caution on Ex Parte Orders
    • The SC has held that ex parte injunctions in free speech cases must only be granted in exceptional circumstances, and only when content is “malicious” or “palpably false.” 
    • Otherwise, they risk stifling public debate and undermining the public’s right to know.

The September 6 Adani Gag Order

  • A Delhi court issued a blanket gag order restraining Paranjoy Guha Thakurta and others from publishing content about Adani Enterprises Limited (AEL), while also authorising takedown of existing material within 36 hours.
  • This judgement had serious lacunas:
    • No judicial examination of the allegedly defamatory content was carried out.
    • The order effectively allowed AEL to curate public information about itself.
    • Journalists were restrained from publishing “unverified or defamatory” reports, amounting to prior restraint — unconstitutional under Article 19(1)(a).

Why Prior Restraint is Problematic

  • Restrictions on speech are valid only under Article 19(2), covering grounds like sovereignty, security, public order, morality, and defamation.
  • But prior restraint carries a heavy burden of proof and is rarely justified.
  • Journalists must be heard since truth and fair comment are lawful defences in defamation cases.

Delhi Court Quashes Gag Order in Adani Defamation Case

  • Later, District Judge of Delhi Court quashed the gag order for four journalists — Ravi Nair, Abir Dasgupta, Ayaskant Das, and Ayush Joshi — stating the order was unsustainable.
  • The court emphasised that the journalists had not been given an opportunity to be heard, violating principles of natural justice.
  • It noted that declaring articles defamatory and ordering their removal without defence could lead to irreversible consequences.
    • If later found non-defamatory, restoring removed content would be infeasible.

Key Highlights of the Judgement

  • The gag order was quashed for being ex-parte and unsustainable.
    • An ex parte order is a court ruling made at the request of one party without the other being present or notified
    • It is granted only in urgent situations for temporary relief, such as restraining orders, to prevent harm until a full hearing with both parties ensures fairness and due process.
  • The court reaffirmed that defendants must be given a chance to present their defence before sweeping takedown orders.
  • Judge warned against irreversible harm from premature content removal.
  • The ruling narrowed the scope but left other related appeals and the main defamation trial pending.

Source: IE | TH | B&B

Adani Gag Order FAQs

Q1: What is the Bonnard standard in defamation cases?

Ans: It states injunctions can be granted only if the defendant clearly cannot justify defamation, not merely on suspicion of defamation.

Q2: How did the SC apply this in 2024?

Ans: The SC overturned an ex parte injunction against Bloomberg, warning pre-trial gag orders must be rare and justified only to prevent greater injustice.

Q3: What did the September 6 Adani gag order state?

Ans: It restrained journalists from publishing content on AEL, ordered content takedowns within 36 hours, and imposed broad prior restraint.

Q4: Why was the gag order quashed?

Ans: The Delhi court ruled it violated natural justice, as journalists weren’t heard, and premature content removal could cause irreversible harm.

Q5: Why is prior restraint considered unconstitutional?

Ans: Because restrictions on free speech must fall under Article 19(2). Prior restraint without hearing the defence undermines lawful safeguards like truth and fair comment.

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