Indian court slams police for tea-drinking arrest

Police found his tea-drinking behaviour suspicious.


Afp September 18, 2013
Man arrested for drinking chai. PHOTO: FILE

MUMBAI: An Indian court has reprimanded police for arresting a man they accused of drinking tea in a "suspicious" manner at one of the country's ubiquitous roadside stalls.

Vijay Patil was drinking tea in the western city of Kolhapur in February when he was arrested under Section 151 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which allows an arrest to prevent someone imminently expected to commit a crime.

Police said there was no "satisfactory explanation" for the 49-year-old's tea-drinking behaviour and "found his conduct suspicious", according to the court order seen by AFP on Wednesday.

But Bombay High Court threw out the case earlier this month, describing the police motive as "bewildering".

"We were unaware that the law required anyone to give an explanation for having tea, whether in the morning, noon or night," said Judges GS Patel and SC Dharmadhikari in the order.

"One might take tea in a variety of ways, not all of them always elegant or delicate, some of them perhaps even noisy. But we know of no way to drink tea 'suspiciously'."

The judges heard that Patil had a large number of criminal cases against him, but they pointed out that he had no convictions - "though even that would not have been justification enough" for his arrest, they said.

Section 151 can only be invoked without an arrest warrant if the person is imminently likely to commit a crime that could not otherwise be prevented, otherwise the detention violates their rights, the judges added.

"The ingestion of a cup that cheers demands no explanation. And while cutting chai is permissible, now even fashionable, cutting corners with the law is not."

"Cutting chai" is an Indian term for a half-cup of sweet and spicy milky tea.

COMMENTS (18)

Rakib | 10 years ago | Reply

@gp65: Right-ho! Pity that journos try to make even a commonplace event in to something bizarre if it's India. I wonder what would happen in an aircraft in US/Europe to an Arab-looking man if he is overheard uttering certain words even innocently while conversing with a companion! @Rashid: thanks! Your gentle mischief & keen perception remind me so much of a friend here "Cynical" whom I haven't seen lately. Let's recall that but for best of Indian Darjeeling CTC Tea packed in 300-odd Assamese wooden chests but thrown overboard in Boston harbour in 1773, which in turn led to Revolution, USA would have been still a colony of England!! Chai-in-Paani indeed!

Rashid | 10 years ago | Reply

@Rakib

I have to be honest. I posed a rhetorical question bordering on provocation. Good, that I did. The reward has been worth the mischief. How else I could possibly inspire a response such as yours? The seamless linking of sugarcane with dark rum, harmless Betel-nut with dreaded ‘SUPARI’, Chai-Paani with ‘bribe’ and as well with a ‘feeling of camaraderie’, and the multiple nuances of Hukkah-Paani tehzeeb; all within two hundred words is more than I hoped for. Thanks.

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