A Delhi court on Thursday denied bail to former Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) student Umar Khalid in an Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) case registered against him in connection with the Delhi Riots of February 2020, reported Bar and Bench.
The order was reserved on March 3 by Additional Sessions Judge Amitabh Rawat of the Karkardooma Court and was deferred on three occasions – March 14, 21 and 23.
Spanning over eight months, the bail hearings witnessed some interesting arguments by defence lawyer and Senior Counsel Trideep Pais, and Special Public ProsecutorAmit Prasad for the State.
Pais on one occasion contended that a number of persons protested against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and the protest was secular in nature, but the chargesheet was communal.
He argued that the case against Khalid was borne out of malice and the chargesheet against him was a result of “fertile imagination” of the police officer who drafted it. He further contended that the witness statements against Khalid were inconsistent and the chargesheet resembled a television serial script.
Prasad, on the contrary, countered the claim that the chargesheet was communal, saying that the first conviction in the case was of a Hindu person.
The prosecution had alleged that the Delhi Riots were part of a premeditated, deep-rooted conspiracy which was hatched by the accused persons.
Referring to Khalid’s speech where he mentioned the visit of US President Donald Trump, the prosecutor argued that Khalid sought to create an environment that was aimed for the international media.
Khalid was also stated to have chosen his words while using terms such as “Tiranga” (tricolour) and “Constitution,” only to avoid the rigmarole of being booked again. According to the prosecutor, he had been booked in 2016 and was careful this time.
The Delhi Police had arrested Khalid in this case on September 13, 2020 and chargesheeted him on November 22 the same year under various sections of the UAPA and the Indian Penal Code. Khalid moved a bail plea in July 2021, and several hearings later, the Court reserved its order earlier this month.