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In her first interview since walking out of Ahmedabad's Sabarmati Central Jail, activist-journalist Teesta Setalvad told NDTV on Monday, 5 September, that she had "expected due process of law, like the issue of notice, to be followed and not the kind of crackdown which happened" in her case.
Referring to fact-checker Mohammed Zubair's arrest over a tweet, she said that laws need to be "applied with honesty" by the police.
"Look what happened to Zubair – so many examples of this "crackdown" and the police getting away without following due process. It can happen to anybody," she told NDTV.
Describing her police custody as "strange", Setalvad also pointed out that she was called for questioning only once, for just three hours, during her entire police remand period of six days.
Setalvad walked out of a Gujarat jail on the evening of Saturday, 3 September, a day after she was granted interim bail by the Supreme Court, in connection with the 2002 Gujarat riots conspiracy case.
Speaking to NDTV, Setalvad said that she had a "strange" experience with police custody as she was called for questioning only once (from 11 pm to 2:30 am) during the entire six-day period, when she was kept in the police remand. "I was just sitting around the rest of the time," she said.
Answering a question about the wider crackdown on activists and others who critique the Centre, she said:
"We have a set of laws, IPC laws others. These laws need to be applied with some degree of honesty, impartiality and autonomy. The whole issue of police not becoming of the Executive's arm is the question here. Its worrying. If you have a situation where the police become used to this kind of arrests and raids and then get away with it, then it can become a threat to anybody tomorrow, not just activists."
Stating that she was in jail for 63 days after being in police remand for seven days, Setalvad said that it is important for the members of civil society to look at the issues related to the jail conditions for women, children, and undertrials.
Speaking to NDTV, Setalvad said that the Sabarmati Jail has a new women's jail next to the men's jail where around 200 women – 50 convicts and some 150 undertrials – are lodged. Contrary to her expectation, she said that her security was better.
She also said that several women in the jail are suffering from chronic health issues. Many are also suffering from mental health issues because of the confined spaces, she added.
"They have a nice study center and library inside the women's jail which has an 18 seater room where you can sit and write and read. But very often the library was kept shut due to staff shortage. That was another battle I had to fight for keeping the space open at fixed timings so some of us could read and write there," she told NDTV.
The Gujarat Crime Branch had on 26 June arrested Setalvad along with others for allegedly fabricating evidence to frame "innocent people" in the 2002 Gujarat riots conspiracy case.
She was released on bail on Saturday, 3 September, after being in jail for close to 70 days.
On Thursday, 1 September, a bench led by Chief Justice UU Lalit said that none of the offences that Setalvad was charged with could bar her from getting bail.
"There is no offence in this case which comes with a rider that bail cannot be granted like UAPA, POTA. These are normal IPC offences. These are not bodily offences, these are offences of documents filed in court," the bench had said, as per Live Law.
It also said that in such cases, after the initial period of police custody, nothing should stop investigators from continuing their probe without taking custody, adding that as per the law, a woman is entitled to favourable treatment.
Setalvad had challenged the Gujarat High Court's rejection of her interim bail in connection with the case.
(With inputs from NDTV.)
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