India drops sedition charges against ‘Pakistan cricket fans’

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TOPSHOT - Kashmiri cricket fans celebrate after Pakistan's win in the International Cricket Championship (ICC) Champions Trophy final cricket match against India on June 18, 2017 in downtown Srinagar. Pakistan thrashed title-holders India by 180 runs to win the Champions Trophy final at The Oval in London on June 18, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / TAUSEEF MUSTAFA (Photo credit should read TAUSEEF MUSTAFA/AFP/Getty Images)

NEW DEHLI: Indian police have dropped sedition charges against 15 Muslim men arrested for allegedly shouting “anti-India and pro-Pakistan” slogans during the Champions Trophy cricket final.

Police in Madhya Pradesh state told reporters that the sedition was “hard to prove”, so these men have been charged with “disturbing communal harmony” instead.

They were arrested after their Hindu neighbours complained they had exploded firecrackers during the game, which saw Pakistan beat India by 180 runs.

Senior police officer RR Parihar said that an additional charge of conspiracy against the men would also remain. The accused were sent to jail in the city of Khandwa on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International has called for the immediate release of the men, calling the arrests “absurd”.

In India, people charged with sedition have to surrender their passports, are not eligible for government jobs, must appear in court as and when required, and spend money on legal fees. If guilty they could be sent to prison for life.

The India Today website quoted police as saying that the men were charged because of the anti-India slogans, not because they were cheering for Pakistan. However, family members of the accused have denied the charges against them.

This is not the first time Indian Muslims have got into trouble for cheering for the Pakistan cricket team.

In 2014, 66 Muslim students from Indian-administered Kashmir were kicked out of their university in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh and charged with disturbing communal harmony.

And in 2016, police were sent to a university in Indian-administered Kashmir after the clashes between students from the state, the only Muslim majority one in India, and other parts of the country.