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Delhi HC orders Centre to take down ‘false’ posts on CJI, ministers playing badminton at UK event
India🏛️ PoliticsCenter18 days ago

Delhi HC orders Centre to take down ‘false’ posts on CJI, ministers playing badminton at UK event

The Delhi High Court ordered the Indian government to remove social media posts that falsely claimed the Chief Justice of India, Supreme Court judges, and union ministers participated in a badminton tournament in London at public expense. The court found the claims to be false, malicious, and damaging to the reputations of judicial and executive institutions. The Badminton Association of India filed the petition, arguing the posts spread misinformation. The court emphasized that the content was part of a 'systematic misinformation campaign' and noted that the Press Information Bureau had already labeled the claims as false. It directed the government to notify social media platforms to remove and block access to such content.

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2 reports

Scroll.in logoScroll.inIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 8018 days ago
Delhi HC orders removal of ‘false’ reports about judges’ London badminton event

The Delhi High Court has ordered the removal of 'entirely false' reports alleging that Chief Justice of India Surya Kant and other judges traveled to London at public expense to play in a badminton tournament. These claims were challenged by the Badminton Association of India, which argued they undermined judicial independence. The court emphasized that the content was 'malicious and derogatory' and part of a 'systematic misinformation campaign.' It directed the government to ensure social media platforms and search engines remove such content within 24 hours and asked for a compliance update within three weeks. The court noted that the images used in the reports were from a local event in Delhi, not London.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the court's ruling against false claims about judges and officials, citing both the legal action taken and the arguments from the Badminton Association of India and the Solicitor General. There is no overt ideological framing, and the focus is on the legal process and factual澄清.

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 80): Factual details match cross-source accounts on Telegram ban interpretation. Tone suggests critique of government's legal maneuvering, but remains objective overall.

Hindustan Times logoHindustan TimesIndependentCenter18 days ago
Delhi HC orders Centre to take down ‘false’ posts on CJI, ministers playing badminton at UK event

The Delhi High Court ordered the Indian government to remove social media posts that falsely claimed the Chief Justice of India, Supreme Court judges, and union ministers participated in a badminton tournament in London at public expense. The court found the claims to be false, malicious, and damaging to the reputations of judicial and executive institutions. The Badminton Association of India filed the petition, arguing the posts spread misinformation. The court emphasized that the content was part of a 'systematic misinformation campaign' and noted that the Press Information Bureau had already labeled the claims as false. It directed the government to notify social media platforms to remove and block access to such content.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the court's ruling and arguments from both the petitioner and the government without overtly favoring either side. It quotes the court’s findings and includes perspectives from the Badminton Association of India and the government, maintaining neutrality in framing the dispute.

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