
The Madras High Court set out on the police for Tamil for the mechanical conclusion of the criminal proceedings registered on Facebook, and reported a bar and a bench on Friday.
The bench, headed by a judge to Murali Shankar, criticized a police action that contained vulgar subtitles next to Lord Krishna’s painting, stolen by Gopis clothes.
According to justice to Murali Shankar, the depiction of religious personalities with sensitivity to proper must be displayed. He added that the government must ensure that the freedom of expression does not translate into religious feelings.
“The depiction of Hindu gods in a disrespectful way, deliberately injury to millions of sentiment, cannot be justified. Such acts have the potential to cause hostility, religious outrage, social disorder and undermine municipal harmony.
What is the case:
According to the report, the Facebook post contained two comments Tamil. The first comment presented by Sathish Kumar said Krishna Jayanti was a celebration of a man who stole the clothes of women’s bathing.
Then P Paramasivan filed a criminal case and claimed that the contribution was recorded with the intention of defamating the Hindu gods and damaging the image of Hindu women.
Paramasivan even raised concerns that the contribution could potentially cause problems with law and order for religious reasons.
In February, however, the police submitted a negative final report before the court court and claimed that it had applied for information about the Facebook user, which uploaded the post from META but could not secure the data.
The Court of Justice accepted the negative final report of the police, which classified this case as the UN.
Then the complainant turned to the Supreme Court with the inspection reason. The Madras High Court then pulled the police for not being hard to carry out criminal proceedings. They also ordered them to restore the investigation and report in three months.
(Tagstotranslate) Madras High Court