Completely disconnected with Umar Khalid: Sharjeel Imam tells Delhi HC
Completely disconnected with Umar Khalid: Sharjeel Imam tells Delhi HC
New Delhi, Activist Sharjeel Imam, accused in a February 2020 riots case, on Thursday argued in the Delhi High Court that he was "completely disconnected" with the place, time and co-accused, including Umar Khalid.

Imam's counsel urged a bench of Justices Navin Chawla and Shalinder Kaur to show "compassion" in deciding his bail plea.
His speeches and WhatsApp chats never called for any unrest, the counsel added.
"This boy has spent more than five years in continuous custody. He is the breadwinner. He has an old ailing mother and no father," said Imam's counsel.
The counsel reiterated that he was not even in the capital post January 15, 2020 and was arrested by the police from his hometown in Bihar on January 28, 2020 in a separate case. He contended Imam, as a result, did not part take in any of the "conspiratorial" meetings with others.
While the prosecution's conspiracy case was based on messages exchanged among the accused persons, Imam's counsel denied chatting with them saying he was not in purported main WhatsApp group where chakka jams were discussed.
The WhatsApp group Imam was a part of, had no messages that even "remotely incite violence", the lawyer said.
"There is not a single message shown to show one community was pitted against another..One evidence of violence versus 40 evidence of non-violence demolish the case of the prosecution," the counsel added.
The lawyer argued though a witness had alleged that he was "related to Umar Khalid and some other accused", Imam had no such connection.
Imam's lawyer said his client was already facing prosecution in separate cases alleging sedition and hate speech, in which he was granted bail.
There were judicial pronouncements that found there was no consequent violence following his speeches, he added.
With respect to the police's case that he raised the Shaheen Bagh protest site, the lawyer argued Imam distanced himself from the site on January 2, 2020 apprehending involvement of miscreants and the present case ought not to be "mixed" with violence that broke earlier in Jamia Milia Islamia in December 2019.
Umar Khalid, Imam and several others have been booked under Unlawful Activities Act and provisions of the Indian Penal Code for allegedly being the "masterminds" of the February 2020 riots, which had left 53 people dead and over 700 injured.
The violence erupted during the protests against the CAA and NRC.
Imam was arrested in the case on August 25, 2020.
The matter would not be heard on May 21.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.