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Regular-article-logo Tuesday, 05 November 2024

SC to deliver verdict on Thursday on contempt plea against Rahul Gandhi for 'chowkidar chor hai' remark

Gandhi had told the bench that he has already tendered unconditional apology for wrongly attributing the remarks to the apex court

PTI New Delhi Published 13.11.19, 01:17 PM
A bench comprising Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices S. K. Kaul and K. M. Joseph had on May 10 reserved the judgement in the case

A bench comprising Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices S. K. Kaul and K. M. Joseph had on May 10 reserved the judgement in the case (AP)

The Supreme Court is scheduled to pronounce on Thursday its verdict on the criminal contempt plea filed against Congress leader Rahul Gandhi by BJP MP Meenakshi Lekhi for wrongly attributing to the apex court his 'chowkidar chor hai' remark in the Rafale case against Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Gandhi had made the remarks on April 10, the day the apex court had dismissed the Centre's preliminary objections over admissibility of certain documents for supporting the review petitions against the December 14 2019 verdict in the Rafale case.

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A Bench comprising Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices S. K. Kaul and K. M. Joseph had on May 10 reserved the judgement.

Gandhi, who was then the president of the Congress, had told the bench that he has already tendered unconditional apology for wrongly attributing the remarks relating to the Prime Minister to the apex court.

Senior advocate A. M. Singhvi, appearing for Gandhi, had told the bench that the Congress leader expressed regret over the wrongful attribution to the apex court.

Senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi, appearing for Lekhi, had submitted that the apology tendered by Gandhi should be rejected and action must be taken against him as per the law.

Rohatgi also argued that the court should ask Gandhi to make an apology to the public for his remarks.

Gandhi had on May 8 tendered unconditional apology in the apex court for wrongfully attributing to it his 'chowkidar chor hai' remark in the Rafale verdict and said that he holds the top court in the 'highest esteem and respect' and any attributions to it were 'entirely unintentional, non-wilful and inadvertent'.

The three-page affidavit was filed by the then Congress president after he had drawn flak from the apex court on April 30 over his earlier affidavit in which he had not directly admitted his mistake for incorrectly attributing the allegedly contemptuous remark to the top court.

Lekhi filed the contempt plea against Gandhi for the 'chowkidar chor hai' remarks against Modi, which the top court had said were incorrectly attributed to it.

Gandhi, in his explanation filed in the court earlier, had said that his statement was made in the 'heat of political campaigning' and there was not the 'slightest intention to insinuate' anything regarding the Supreme Court proceedings in any manner.

He had said that his April 10 statement was made in purely political context to counter the 'misinformation campaign' being led by senior BJP functionaries as well as the government that the apex court verdict of December 14 last year was a 'clean chit' to the Centre regarding all the aspects of the Rafale deal.

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