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Regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Delhi Riots book authors file police complaint

Cheating, mischief, misappropriation of property and criminal intimidation allegations

PTI New Delhi Published 04.09.20, 01:38 AM
The complaint accused professor Nandini Sundar and news portals The Print and Newslaundry of “illegal receipt and retention of stolen property”, and several individuals, including historian William Dalrymple and author Aatish Taseer, of “criminal intimidation and (making) statements creating and promoting enmity, hatred, and ill will between classes”.

The complaint accused professor Nandini Sundar and news portals The Print and Newslaundry of “illegal receipt and retention of stolen property”, and several individuals, including historian William Dalrymple and author Aatish Taseer, of “criminal intimidation and (making) statements creating and promoting enmity, hatred, and ill will between classes”. Wikipedia

The authors of the controversial book, Delhi Riots 2020: The Untold Story, filed a complaint with the police on Thursday against publishing house Bloomsbury, some media organisations and noted individuals, alleging cheating, mischief, misappropriation of property and criminal intimidation by them.

The authors met Delhi commissioner of police S.N. Shrivastava with their complaint and sought “immediate and necessary action” against those named in it.

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The complaint accused professor Nandini Sundar and news portals The Print and Newslaundry of “illegal receipt and retention of stolen property”, and several individuals, including historian William Dalrymple and author Aatish Taseer, of “criminal intimidation and (making) statements creating and promoting enmity, hatred, and ill will between classes”.

The book, authored by advocate Monika Arora and professors Sonali Chitalkar and Prerna Malhotra, got embroiled in a controversy for inviting BJP leader Kapil Mishra as a guest of honour on its launch on August 22. There have been allegations that several leaders, including Mishra, made inflammatory speeches targeting anti-citizenship law protesters before the violence broke out in northeast Delhi on February 23.

Bloomsbury, after facing a backlash on social media, withdrew itself from the book, saying the virtual launch was “organised without its knowledge”. The book found a new publishing house in Garuda Prakashan the next day.

According to the complaint signed by Arora, Bloomsbury “wilfully with dishonest intentions expunged her work and also leaked a PDF version of the book in public to hamper any future sales”.

“The present complaint seeks investigation... for being the publisher of my authored book and having deliberately, wilfully with dishonest intentions expunged my work, effort and skill thereby diminishing my goodwill, reputation and standing, without my knowledge and consent rescinded from performing its obligations under the terms of the agreement dated 29.5.2020 and leaked a PDF version of the book in public to hamper any future sales,” the complaint said.

In the complaint, Arora claimed that a “venomous campaign” emerged on the social media and a “group of individuals/ propagandists”, whom she referred to as “Urban Naxal Gang”, “conspired and went all out to kill the book by pressurizing, intimidating, bullying and blackmailing the publishers”.

She also put out tweets by activist Saket Gokhale, along with journalist Arfa Khanum Sherwani and poet Meena Kandasamy, all named in the complaint, alleging that they were congratulating one another for being able to put a stop on the release of the book.

The complaint also accused The Quint and NewsLaundry and Sundar for critiquing the book and attempting to discredit the authors’ work based on a leaked or “stolen” PDF copy of the book.

Taseer tweeted: “I’m actually glad this has happened. This should remove all doubt, in anyone’s mind, that these were not independent writers at all, but a state-sponsored syndicate, dedicated to whitewashing the role of certain BJP leaders in the Delhi Riots.”

“This complaint is a joke. But the one I file about the contents of the book with DGP Maharashtra won’t be,” tweeted Gokhale.

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