Delhi High Court reserves order on NewsClick HR head’s bail plea in UAPA case

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New Delhi, May 03
The Delhi High Court on Friday reserved its order on a bail plea of NewsClick’s human resources department chief Amit Chakravarty in a case lodged against the news portal under anti-terror law UAPA over charges that it received money to spread pro-China propaganda.
Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma reserved the order after Chakravarty’s counsel submitted that the chargesheet has already been filed in the case and the petitioner, after turning an approver, has been cited as a prosecution witness.
The lawyer said the high court has the discretion under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to grant bail to Chakravarty.
The counsel for the Enforcement Directorate said the prosecution has no objection if the relief is granted to him.
Chakravarty’s lawyer said his client has been granted pardon in the case by the trial court and is also cooperating in the probe.
In January, the trial court allowed Chakravarty to turn an approver in the case and granted pardon to him.
Chakravarty has claimed that he is in possession of “material information” about the case, which he is willing to disclose to the Delhi Police.
The Special Cell of the Delhi Police arrested NewsClick founder Prabir Purkayastha and Chakravarty on October 3 last year. Both of them are currently in judicial custody.
According to the FIR, a large amount of funds to the news portal came from China to “disrupt the sovereignty of India” and cause disaffection against the country.
The FIR also accused Purkayastha of conspiring with a group—People’s Alliance for Democracy and Secularism—to sabotage the electoral process during the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.
Raids were conducted at 88 locations in Delhi and seven in other states on the suspects named in the FIR and those whose names surfaced following data analysis, police said.
Around 300 electronic gadgets were seized from the offices of NewsClick and residences of the journalists who were examined.
Following the raids, 46 individuals, including nine female journalists, were questioned by the Special Cell.

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