Delhi HC orders National Herald to vacate office in capital

The high court rejected a request by Associated Journals in which it had challenged a previous order asking it to vacate the office space in Delhi.

Update: 2019-02-28 23:46 GMT
Delhi High Court on Tuesday agreed to hear a PIL seeking directions to the Centre to implement measures to control the country's rising population on the ground that it was the root cause behind rise in crimes, pollution and dearth of resources and jobs. (Photo: File)

New Delhi: The Delhi high court on Thursday cancelled a petition and asked the publisher of National Herald newspaper to vacate its office in the national capital. The court dismissed a petition by the publisher against a December order to vacate.

The high court rejected a request by Associated Journals in which it had challenged a previous order asking it to vacate the office space in Delhi.

The government had told the court that no press had been functioning in the premises for at least 10 years and it had been used only for commercial purposes, in violation of its lease. The government, in October last year, cancelled the publisher’s 56-year-old lease for the building, asking it to vacate it.

On December 21, 2018, the Delhi high court asked Associated Journals Limi-ted to vacate the premises within two weeks, after which eviction proceedings would be initiated.

BJP leader Subramanian Swamy had alleged that Sonia Gandhi and her son Rahul Gandhi set up a company to buy debts worth Rs 90 crore owed by Associated Journals, which publishes three newspapers including National Herald, founded by Jawaharlal Nehru — Rahul Gandhi’s great-grandfather — before he became India’s first Prime Minister.

In 2008, Associated Journals had shut down over its debts. The BJP alleges that the Gandhis used Congress funds to pay off its debts even though the publisher has real estate assets worth thousands of crores.

In November last year, National Herald tweeted that it was being targeted by the BJP government for its growing digital presence.

Subramanian Swamy had filed a case in 2012 against then Congress chief Sonia Gandhi and her son Rahul Gandhi, alleging irregularities related to a loan of Rs. 90 crore given by the Congress to the AJL.

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