HC asks Mamata Govt to give ads to CPI(M) mouthpiece
Kolkata, Mar 21(IBNS) The Calcutta High Court has ordered that the Mamata Banerjee government must give advertisements to Ganashakti, the CPI(M) mouthpiece in West Bengal.
The order was passed on February 27 by Justice Debangsu Basak but came to the notice of the newspaper on Friday evening.
The vernacular daily had moved the court in 2012 complaining that that it was not getting any government ads since Mamata Banerjee came to power on .May 20, 2011.
The complainant claimed that it was being discriminated against and that the refusal to give ads to it violated free speech and was unconstitutional.
While the writ was pending, the government took a decision on July 12, 2013, that it was unable to give ads to Ganashakti because the newspaper was owned and published by the West Bengal State Committee of CPI(M) and giving it ads would amount to funding a political party by the government.
The state also argued that placing of ads was a commercial transaction and the state government had the right to decide who to give it to.
On behalf of Ganashakti, advocate Bikash Ranjan Bhattacharyya, contended that the newspaper was accredited by the Indian Newspaper Society (INS) and recognized by the Centre's Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity (DAVP) and that the right to free speech was a fundamental right.
He said other state governments and even the central government placed ads in Ganashakti and the state government had to follow DAVP rules.
The state government had to follow DAVP rules, Mr Bhattacharyya contended. Other state governments and even the Central government, he pointed out, placed ads in Ganashakti.
Mr Bhattacharyya also argued that the law allows the postal department to deliver newspapers, irrespective of who owns it, at less than normal rates. If a Central law allows a subsidy to an organ of a political party for its postal transmission, that is not construed to be funding a political party.
Therefore, ads to a newspaper should not be seen as funding its owner. By that count, the state should not give ads to any privately owned newspaper either. He submitted that the July 2013 decision of the government should be squashed.
The last hearing of the case was on December 3, 2014. On February 27, Justice Debangsu Basak set aside the July 2013 decision of the state government and ordered it to grant ads to Ganashakti.
Top Headlines
-
News
Kolkata: ICCR hosts 10th anniversary celebration of Robir Kiran
December 14, 2025
-
News
Sydney's Bondi Beach horror: Pakistani-origin man named as one of thekeysuspects
December 14, 2025
-
News
Abba Aur Main: Ek Anokhi Dastan Urdu Translation of Neelima Dalmias Memoir Launched at New Delhis Jashn-e-Rekhta Festival
December 14, 2025
-
News
Jaipur: Cultural activist Sundeep Bhutoria calls for Social Investment Policy for Non-resident Rajasthanis at Pravasi Rajasthan Divas
December 14, 2025
-
News
Shashi Tharoor on guest list of Putin State dinner; Rahul Gandhi, Kharge not invited
December 05, 2025
-
News
Putin launches RT India Kremlin-funded RT Network's India arm with 100-member team
December 05, 2025
-
News
Inside Putin's India visit: You wont believe what's on the agenda!
December 04, 2025
-
News
Imminent threat: Marco Rubio warns against rise of radical Islam, announces US visa crackdown
December 04, 2025
-
News
You wont believe what Air India did to Anoushka Shankars sitar shes furious!
December 04, 2025
-
News
Bengal SIR shock: 1 lakh deceased voters found in Kolkata North!
December 03, 2025




