This story is from February 20, 2017

Make Gandhi killer Godse’s statement public: CIC

Make Gandhi killer Godse’s statement public: CIC
Information commissioner Sridhar Acharyulu
NEW DELHI: Despite the widespread condemnation of Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination, the statement of his killer Nathuram Godse should be made public along with other relevant court records, the Central Information Commission has ruled.
Godse’s statement in court is available in unverified form on the internet and as part of some reports but has long been seen as a politically volatile and emotive justification of his decision to assassinate Gandhi on January 30, 1948.

The CIC has asked the National Archives of India to place the record on its website. Information commissioner Sridhar Acharyulu said the disclosure or circulation of Godse’s opinion should not be restricted. He said Gandhi’s life, character and image as a champion of peace and Hindu-Muslim unity could not be tarnished either by his physical elimination or adverse analysis of his policies.
“One may disagree with Godse and his co-accused but we cannot refuse disclosure or circulation of his opinion.New Delhi: Ordering that Mahatma Gandhi’s killer Nathuram Godse’s statement should be made public along with other relevant court records, information commissioner Sridhar Acharyulu has said that the assassin’s opinion could not be construed as any justification for Gandhi’s killing. “At the same time, neither Nathuram Godse nor the holder of his theme or opinion can go to the extent of killing a person whose philosophy he cannot agree with,” Acharyulu said in his order.
Acharyulu, who was in the news for his order asking Delhi University to disclose details of PM Narendra Modi’s BA correspondence degree, was responding to a petition seeking details from Delhi Police. The police had forwarded the complaint to the National Archives of India (NAI).
The archives told the petitioner that he could examine the records and retrieve the information for himself. The petitioner then sought relief from the CIC. “The commission also directs the NAI to place the index of records available now with it about the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi on its official website along with the procedure to gain access, and recommends development of an archive to include present digitised records and collect as many as possible from various sources to be part of their disclosures under Section 4(1)(b),” Acharyulu said. The murder and Godse’s motivations are subject of books like Manohar Malgaonkar’s ‘Men Who Killed Gandhi’ and the assassin’s account has been criticised as a hate speech while also being seen as a product of the communal frenzy of Partition.
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