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India court questions arrests for Facebook post

NEW DELHI India's top court Friday ordered a state government to explain the arrests of two women for a comment one of them posted on Facebook, in a case that has sparked nationwide outrage over the misuse of India's Internet laws.

The women were arrested in Thane, a suburb of Mumbai in the state of Maharashtra, and immediately freed on bail for criticizing the shutdown of India's financial capital after the death last week of a powerful right-wing politician. While one woman posted the comment, her friend who "liked" the comment was also arrested.

The controversy began following the death earlier this month of Bal Thackeray, founder of the Hindu nationalist Shiv Sena party. He was accorded a state funeral in Mumbai, which 2,000,000 mourners attended.

Shaheen Dhadha said she had posted a comment on Facebook saying that men like Bal Thackeray die every day and there was no need for a Mumbai "bandh," or general strike, to honor him, India TV reports.

Supporters throng the funeral cortege of Indian Hindu nationalist Shiv Sena party leader Bal Thackeray during a procession in Mumbai on November 18, 2012. Thackeray, who called his followers "Hindu warriors" and was widely accused of stoking ethnic and religious violence, died at age 86, triggering a virtual shutdown of the city. STRDEL/AFP/Getty Images

Dhadha told the newschannel that less than a half hour after posting her comment she received a phone call asking if she was the author. Her phone line was then disconnected, and she was brought to a police station and asked to apologize.

The widespread protests in the media and the public outcry that followed the arrests led the Maharashtra government to this week suspend the two policemen and transfer the magistrate who had approved the arrest and granted bail.

The Supreme Court gave Maharashtra four weeks to explain the circumstances under which the women were arrested.

The court was hearing a petition filed by Shreya Singhal, a student in New Delhi, challenging the Internet law and the possibility of its misuse. Singhal said the wording of the law was vague, allowing it to be abused by people in authority.

On Thursday, India's federal telecommunications ministry issued fresh guidelines making it more difficult for police to arrest people for posts on social networking sites. Any arrest for a social media comment that is perceived to create social unrest will now have to be approved by a senior police official.

The Mumbai arrests came barely two months after the Maharashtra police arrested a political cartoonist on sedition charges for drawings that mocked corruption in the Indian government. The charges were later dropped.

The Supreme Court also issued similar notices to the governments of West Bengal state and the southeastern city state of Puducherry that critics say abused authority by arresting citizens for social media posts.

Earlier this year, a university professor was arrested in West Bengal for forwarding an email cartoon that caricatured the chief minister there. He was later released on bail.

In Puducherry, a businessman was arrested last month for a tweet criticizing the son of India's finance minister. The businessman is also out on bail.

The Times of India reported Thursday that a 19-year-old from Thane district was detained on suspicion of posting an "objectionable" Facebook comment against Maharashtra Navnirman Sena party leader Raj Thackeray, but was released after police found a "fake account" had been used by an unknown person or persons in the teenager's name.

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