CSE WELCOMES HIGH COURT
DECISION
The Centre for Science and Environment welcomes the decision of the High Court in
response to a petition filed by PepsiCo India Holdings Pvt Ltd and Others, calling for an
expert committee to review the findings of pesticide residues in carbonated soft drinks.
The experts findings are to be made available in 3 weeks.
All sides agreed that the government should choose the laboratories where the testing
is done, and samples for testing should be picked up at random from the market, not
provided by the company.
The court endorsed CSEs concern over the lack of standards for permissible
pesticide residues in soft drinks sold in India. It has instructed the government to
review the standards after comparing with the standards that may exist in other parts of
the world.
The PepsiCo petition, filed on Friday, questioned CSEs credibility and
motivation, and made several unsubstantiated allegations, amounting to questioning the
right of a public interest organisation to carry out such tests and make them public. It
refers to CSE as having "no legal authority or recognition". At the same time,
it asserts the constitutional right of the Petitioners to continue to sell
their products.
Such lawsuits, where the rights of individuals or institutions to bring matters of
public interest to the notice of the public are questioned, are common in countries like
the US. Common enough to be given a name: Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation
or SLAPP for short. SLAPPs amount to silencing people into submission. They are not just
"intimidation lawsuits". They question the rights of individuals and
institutions to speak out on a public issue, and to communicate their views to government
officials. They question the right of people to tell their elected representatives what
they think, want, or believe inin effect, for attempting to influence government
action.
The dangers of allowing such lawsuits are well documented in the US. "Scientists
and concerned advocates must be able to express their legitimate concerns. Any restriction
on speech about the quality and safety of our food is dangerous, undemocratic and
unconstitutional," says David Bederman, Associate Professor of Law at Emory
University Law School.
In response, New York, California and about a dozen other states have anti-SLAPP or
citizen protection acts. California has an anti-SLAPP statute (California Code of Civil
Procedure Sec 425.16), which recognises that it is in the public interest to encourage
participation in matters of public significance, and this participation should not be
chilled through abuse of the judicial process. It provides for speedy
identification and dismissal of such lawsuits at the beginning of the case.
The petition sought an interim order to stop CSE from publishing
unsubstantiated" statements or materials against the petitioners, and to
withdraw the material from the website. Counsel for the petitioner, Harish Salve,
announced at the start however that they would not press these charges, withdrawing all
charges of malafide against CSE from the present petition.
According to CSE director Sunita Narain: "The right of individuals and
organisations like CSE to carry out action in public interest and in favour of public
health cannot be questioned. It is a right to hold industries and governments accountable
for their action, and should be strengthened not suppressed."