Now that Kanpur-based cartoonist Aseem Trivedi has been charged with 
sedition for his cartoons that 'mocked' the country's political class, 
Parliament and the national emblem, one has to bear in mind that the 
word "sedition" does not actually figure anywhere in the Indian 
Constitution. It is an offence against the state as enumerated in the 
Indian Penal Code which is an 1860 Act ratified by the British to rule 
over Indians. Section 124 A of the IPC was drawn up in 1860, just three 
years after the British East India Company had weathered the storm of 
the Sepoy Mutiny. 
So yes, the case against Aseem is registered under Section 124A 
of the IPC that is an 1860 Act which defines sedition as: "Whoever by 
words, either spoken or written, or by signs, or by visible 
representation, or otherwise, brings or attempts to bring into hatred or
 contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the 
Government established by law in India, shall be punished with 
imprisonment for life, to which fine may be added, or with imprisonment 
which may extend to three years, to which fine may be added, or with 
fine." 
A member of Repubican Party of India, Amit Katarnayea, had filed a
 complaint against Trivedi that the latter had put up banners mocking 
the Indian constitution during the Anna Hazare rally held last year at 
the Bandra Kurla Complex. 
Before Aseem, Dr Binayak Sen was also charged under the same section,
 a charge the court threw away after the Chhattisgarh government's 
attempts to put Sen away drew international rebuke. Many prominent 
Indians - from Tilak to Gandhi to Jogendra Chandra Bose - have faced 
sedition charges. 
In India, where 'ignorance of law is no excuse,' the Constitution
 however guarantees freedom of speech and expression. Article 19(1)(A) 
of the Indian Constitution says that all citizens have the right to 
freedom of speech and expression. The right to freedom of speech and 
expression incorporates protection for austerely censuring existing 
government structures, policies and administrative schemes, coupled with
 protection for suggesting and recommending the development of other 
system. Article 19 (2) of Indian Constitution says that, every citizen 
of the country  holds the  right to air his or her opinion through the 
printing  or the electronic media, with certain restrictions imposed.
The recent cases of Dr Sen and Aseem reveal the archaic nature of
 sedition charges, something that is not quite in sync with a modern 
democracy which cherishes the ideals of freedom of expression and 
speech. It is one of those numerous IPC codes drawn up in British India 
to help the British Police to lord over native Indians, to crush every 
small protest against British rule. Police reforms and an overhaul of 
police laws is the only way to ensure that such regressive and 
irrelevant sections are relegated to the pages of legal history.

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