November 19, 2001
Issue



COVER
   

Discovery Of India
Nervous about its allies and looking to a post-Afghan war scenario, the United States proposes a military alliance with India. The Government turns it down but this may not be the last word. An EXCLUSIVE report.

 

 
RUSSIAN TOUR
   

War And Peace II
In the Moscow Declaration Against Terrorism, Prime Minister Vajpayee and President Putin have reiterated friendship between India and Russia during peace time and shared firepower in case of war with a third party.

 
BOOK EXCERPTS
 

Inside The Secret World Of Bin Laden
Exclusive excerpts from Peter L. Bergen's Holy War, Inc. Currently terrorism analyst for CNN, Bergen met bin Laden in Afghanistan in 1997. His book is a sprawling thriller on the world's most wanted fugitive and his empire of terror.

 

 
STATES
 

Clash Of Comrades
Bhattacharya's economic reforms are stymied by differences with Politburo purists.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
 
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NORTH AMERICAN SPECIAL: CONTROVERSY

All Clear Now

Indian minister Maneka Gandhi has won a libel suit against Indira Gandhi's biographer Katherine Frank

When Union minister for culture, Maneka Gandhi, won a libel suit against the author and publisher of Indira-The life of Indira Nehru Gandhi, it must certainly have been a moment of satisfaction. Not only did she receive an elaborate apology on Thursday tendered in the London High Court, but she is also set to make a tidy sum as compensation and legal costs.

The compensation figure will be substantial, said Sarosh Zaiwalla of Zaiwalla Solicitors which fought on behalf of the claimant. Though under court rule, the sum remains confidential, the unoffical estimate is around £70,000.

Meanwhile, the publishers have agreed not to further publish the allegations. Says Susanne Frayn of Harper Collins, "We apologise to the claimant and have agreed not to further publish the same or any similar allegation defamatory of the claimant either here or overseas."

Maneka had filed the libel case against the biographer, Katherine Frank, and publisher Harper Collins earlier this year in May. While the book itself raised a lot of controversy in India because of it's allusions to former prime minister Indira Gandhi's love life, Maneka was particularly incensed by the allegations in it made against her and her late husband Sanjay Gandhi, which she termed as "scurrilous and defamatory".

According to the statement read out in the open court: "The book alleges that the claimant was involved in the cover-up of her husband Sanjay's responsibility for the murder in 1976 of someone called Sunderlal, described in the book as an Indian underworld figure; that she and her husband had asked another man Chawla to accept responsibility for the killing and then that she was thereby both prepared to see an innocent man take the blame and was guilty of obstructing the course of justice." Maneka had sought damages amounting to hundreds of thousands of pounds.

In the apology statement tendered last week in open court through their counsel, biographer Katherine Frank and the publisher Harper Collins agreed not to further publish the allegations and "pay substantial damages and costs to her for the injury done to her reputation and feelings."

The defendant's counsel released a statement that read: "May I tender their sincere apologies to the claimant for what was by any view the most serious libel? They accept without reservations that the allegations complain- ed of were and are utterly false and should not have been included in the biography of Indira Gandhi." It said that the defendants believed the information relied upon was correct, but they accept that it will be of little comfort to the claimant who, despite the defendants' absence of malice towards her personally, was grievously libelled and justifiably upset by the allegations against her and her late husband in the 600-page book.

It further added: "The seriousness of the libel is increased by its publication at a time when the claimant is the Indian minister of justice and a democratically elected politician of international repute. She was equally stung by the suggestion that her husband had murdered Sunderlal in the first place. The defendants have accepted that these allegations are wholly false and totally without foundation and that they must have been misled by their source."

The counsel said: "The defendants, through me, undertake to the court that they will be paying the claimant substantial damages to compensate her for the injury done to her reputation and feelings and to mark the sincerity of their apology. They will also be paying her costs in this matter."


 
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