The second material Pais pointed out was rhetorical observations in the chargesheet which, he said, were a result of the “fertile imagination of the police officer”.
The third, he said, was inconsistent witness statements.
The chargesheet cited a 2016 case against Khalid for “anti-India” sloganeering at Jawaharlal Nehru University. It noted that Khalid “was the harbinger” of the call “Bharat tere tukde honge, inshahallah inshallah” and that he had travelled from then to this present “criminal conspiracy to commit a terror act” where the battle cry was “tera mera Rishta kya, la ilaha illallah”.
Khalid’s lawyer said there was no chargesheet, including the chargesheet filed in 2016 by the same police, that alleged that Khalid had made such statements.
“What happened in 2016 was that there was a poetry session,” he said. “It was later termed as sedition. Nowhere was it ever alleged that ‘Bharat tere tukde honge’ was ever said by Umar Khalid..."
Pais continued, “You didn’t have it in the first chargesheet so how do you produce it here? If you were truthful, you would have placed the chargesheet as annexure...Where you could have given proof, you don’t give it. Because you’re lying.”
The chargesheet said that Khalid was “still bearing a façade of secular, progressive activism”. Pais argued that it read like the “script of news channels” who say whatever they want without any responsibility.
Calling the chargesheet’s claims “propaganda”, Pais emphasised that repeated references of Khalid being communal had no basis, even though the idea of it was being constantly drilled into people’s heads. For instance, the chargesheet said Khalid planned to “keep a safe physical distance” from Delhi once the violence broke out in order to “create a perfect alibi”. Pais said there was nothing to support this claim but the media was reporting on it as proof.
Another part of the chargesheet said that with Khalid’s “intellectual acumen, he knew very well that a large majority of Indian Muslims will never prescribe to the perverted definition of Islam being espoused by his disciple Sharjeel Imam and no amount of rhetoric and obfuscation of facts will be enough to brainwash the Indian Muslims to actually believing that CAA would question their nationality. ”
Asking where this was from, Pais said the police were making Khalid a criminal just to propagate their agenda, and to build a narrative that “Islam” and “masjid” are “bad words”.
Pais also pointed out the “inconsistent statements” of a certain protected witness, claiming that the witness either spoke under pressure or “with a forked tongue”. “Malice is a given in this FIR,” Pais said. “There is no way these statements are consistent with each other in order to meet the test of UAPA.”
The matter was adjourned to Monday, September 6.