Supreme Court reserves orders in Prashant Bhushan contempt case
The HinduThe Supreme Court on Tuesday reserved for orders a decade-old contempt case against noted civil rights lawyer Prashant Bhushan, whose office said he refused to apologise but has agreed to issue a statement that his remarks about judicial “corruption” in an interview to Tehelka magazine in 2009, was not meant to hurt judges’ families or tarnish the judiciary. A two-page judicial order published later in the day said the court was yet to receive the “explanation/apology” “submitted” by Mr. Bhushan and Tarun Tejpal, the then editor-in-chief of Tehelka. The flow of events on Tuesday started with a surprise when Justice Mishra asked senior advocate Rajeev Dhavan, appearing for Mr. Bhushan, to suggest a “solution” in the case. Veteran journalists N. Ram and Arun Shourie along with Mr. Bhushan have also filed a separate writ petition challenging “scandalising the court” as an “incurable vague” ground to initiate contempt in a democracy.