The Delhi High Court on Monday allowed journalist Rana Ayyub to travel abroad, while hearing her plea seeking interim relief over an Enforcement Directorate circular stopping her from leaving the country, Bar and Bench reported.
“Writ allowed. Reasons to follow,” the court said, according to the news website. On Friday, it had directed the ED to submit a status report by Monday.
On March 29, Ayyub was stopped at the Mumbai airport before her flight to London to deliver a speech on the intimidation of journalists. She alleged that summons by the Enforcement Directorate “very curiously” reached her email inbox only after she was halted at immigration.
The journalist is an accused in an alleged money laundering case which is being probed by the ED. Ayyub tweeted that the eleventh hour summons came despite the event by the International Center for Journalists being made public on social media weeks ago.
Following the incident, the ICFJ said on Twitter that it was “alarmed at the blatant legal harassment of Rana Ayyub by Indian authorities”, and called for authorities to “end their legal and digital harassment campaign against the multi-award-winning Washington Post journalist”.
Earlier in February, the ED had locked assets worth over Rs 1.77 crore belonging to Ayyub.
Since September 2021, Ayyub has been under investigation due to an FIR which accuses her of raising funds for charity through crowdfunding website Ketto and using them for personal use.
The FIR also accuses Ayyub of violating the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act for allegedly receiving foreign money without any approval certificate or registration from the government. It was based on a complaint by Vikas Sankrityayan, co-founder of Hindu IT Cell, a Hindu supremacist group with a talent for targeted harassment.
Ayyub called the latest FIR “baseless” and “malicious” and maintained that the “entire donation received through Ketto is accounted for and not a single paisa has been misused”.
This was not the first FIR filed against Ayyub last year. In June, the Ghaziabad police booked her for tweeting out a Muslim man’s allegations of assault by a Hindu mob. She had moved the Bombay High Court and obtained protection from arrest for four weeks.
Sources in the ED had told the Indian Express that Ayyub had been summoned twice but she responded to only one summons following which a lookout circular was issued against her. Sources told the paper that based on this, Ayyub was detained by immigration authorities.
Ayyub was issued fresh summons Tuesday for appearance in Delhi on April 1.
Speaking to the Indian Express, Ayyub had said, “I got the first summon in September or October last year when Mumbai ED was probing a forex violations case. I not only met them but provided them all the required documents. The next time I got summons in January, but I had Covid and so sought more time.”
According to Ayyub, she received the fresh summons after she had already been detained at the airport.
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