RSS row: Karnataka HC stays government nod mandate for public gatherings
ET Bureau October 29, 2025 03:20 AM
Synopsis

The Karnataka High Court has stayed a government notification requiring prior permission for public events, a move that had impacted RSS gatherings. The court cited infringement on fundamental rights to speech and assembly, stating such restrictions can only be imposed by law, not a government order. The state government plans to appeal the interim stay.

CM Siddaramaiah says govt will appeal interim stay
Bengaluru: The Karnataka High Court on Tuesday stayed a government notification mandating prior permission for holding events at public places in a major breather to the RSS as the Siddaramaiah-led Congress regime's move threatened to disrupt a series of events the Sangh had planned in its centenary year.

Justice M Nagaprasanna stayed the October 18 notification issued by the home department prohibiting assembly of 10 or more people at government-controlled public places without prior permission, while hearing a writ petition from Punaschetana Seva Samsthe.

CM Siddaramaiah said the government would appeal the interim stay. The court observed such an order prima facie infringed on fundamental rights of citizens as Article 19(1)(a)(b) gives freedom of speech and expression as well as rights to congregate, and the notification seeks to take these rights away.


The judge also said that a right conferred on citizens under Chapter III of the Constitution can be taken away only by a law, not by a government order.
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