Tortured in jail, claims BJP activist who released Mamata’s morphed photo
   Date :16-May-2019

 
KOLKATA/NEW DELHI:
 
BHARATIYA Janata Party youth wing activist Priyanka Sharma, who walked out of jail on Wednesday after being arrested for posting a morphed picture of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Facebook, said jail authorities pressured her and extracted an apology for the post. Sharma, however, asserted she had no regrets for sharing the post for which she had to spend five days behind bars. She claimed she was “mentally tortured” in jail and was not even given enough water to drink. Sharma was released from jail at 9:40 am.
 
After the Supreme Court on Wednesday called her arrest “prima facie arbitrary” and pulled up the West Bengal Government for the delay in releasing her. Apex court had on Tuesday ordered Sharma’s release on bail but directed her to tender a “written apology” for sharing the meme on Banerjee saying that freedom of speech of an individual ends when it infringes upon others’ rights.
 
“The detenue, Priyanka Sharma, is directed to be immediately released on bail. The detenue shall, however, at the time of release, tender an apology in writing for putting up/sharing the pictures complained of on her Facebook account. It is made clear that this order is being made in the special facts and circumstances of this case and shall not operate as a precedent,” the court had said.
 
The vacation bench comprising Justices Indira Banerjee and Sanjiv Khanna, which initially said Sharma’s apology will be a condition for bail, later clarified that it will not be so but she should apologise for sharing the post at the time of her release. Sharma was arrested on May 10 under section 500 (defamation) of the IPC and under other provisions of the Information Technology Act on a complaint by a local Trinamool Congress leader Vibhas Hazra. She was sent to 14-day judicial custody by a trial court in Howrah, and had moved the Supreme Court for bail as lawyers are on a strike in the State to protest alleged police high-handedness against their colleagues.