सं Samvidhan

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023

Section 356

Defamation

Why this exists

Defamation law balances two important values: a person's right to their reputation and dignity, and everyone's right to free speech, fair comment, and honest criticism. The lengthy list of exceptions exists precisely to protect legitimate speech — truthful statements for the public good, fair reporting of court proceedings, honest reviews of books and performances, good-faith complaints to people in authority, and honest opinions on public conduct — so that ordinary criticism, journalism, and workplace supervision are not criminalised.

How courts read it

The Supreme Court of India upheld the constitutionality of criminal defamation (as it existed under the identical earlier IPC sections 499-500) in Subramanian Swamy v. Union of India (2016), holding that protecting individual reputation as part of the right to life and dignity under Article 21 justifies criminal defamation as a reasonable restriction on free speech under Article 19(2), while the detailed exceptions ensure legitimate criticism and reporting remain protected.

Common misconceptions
  • Myth: Any negative statement about someone is defamation.
    Fact: True statements made for the public good, honest opinions on public conduct, fair court reporting, and good-faith reviews or complaints are all specifically excepted from defamation.
  • Myth: Defamation in India is only a civil wrong you can sue for money over.
    Fact: This section makes defamation a criminal offence too, punishable with imprisonment, fine, or community service, separate from any civil defamation lawsuit for damages.