Pre-independence The first known registered case under the section was in
Calcutta High Court in 1891;
Queen Empress v Jogendra Chunder Bose. Bose's article, published in his own
Bengali magazine
Bangobasi, criticized the
Age of Consent Act, 1891. The Act was described as "forced Europeanisation" and a gag on Hindus, who were described as legally incapable and prevented from rebelling against the Act. The authorities put forth a claim that Bose had incited rebellion; in his instructions to the jury, the Chief Justice
William Comer Petheram explained the meaning of "disaffection" as "a feeling contrary to affection, in other words, dislike or hatred" and linked it with disobedience towards the government. Bose was nevertheless released on bail, and the case was dropped. The sedition trial of 1897 against
Lokmanya Tilak is historically famous. Tilak, a lawyer by training, was also politically active in support of independence. He established and published two dailies—
Kesari in
Marathi and
Mahratta in English; both being published from
Pune. In 1894, Professor R. P. Karkaria presented his paper on the
Maratha king Shivaji to the
Royal Asiatic Society in Bombay. This turned into an annual celebration commemorating the anniversary of Shivaji's coronation. Three years later, Tilak published reports of this celebration, as "Shivaji's Utterances"; this essay doubled as an attack on the colonial government. Justice
Arthur Strachey, who presided over Tilak's case, widened the understanding of Section 124A. Under Strachey's definition, the attempt to excite "feelings of enmity" against the government was also a form of sedition. Tilak was found guilty by the jury and sentenced to 18 months of rigorous imprisonment. In 1922,
Mahatma Gandhi's three articles for
Young India resulted into his and
Shankarlal Banker's imprisonment under the sedition section. While appearing in court, Gandhi referred to Section 124A as the "prince among the political sections of the Indian Penal Code designed to suppress the liberty of the citizen".
Post-independence In 1951, the
Punjab High Court ruled Section 124A to be unconstitutional. A similar ruling was passed in 1959 by the
Allahabad High Court, which also concluded that it struck at the very root of free speech. The Government of India appealed to the
Supreme Court of India, which in 1962 ruled that speeches against the government or political parties were not illegal while upholding it as applicable to
separatism by persuasion or force; this pronouncement had the effect of diluting the law. During the 21st century, various notable authors, creative professionals, activists, and politicians have been charged with sedition under Section 124A. Cases include the then
Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) general secretary
Praveen Togadia (2003),
Simranjit Singh Mann (2005),
Binayak Sen (2007), author
Arundhati Roy (2010), cartoonist
Aseem Trivedi (2012), student activist
Rinshad Reera (2019), climate activist
Disha Ravi (2020). == Low conviction rate ==