The government could not agree with any action against freedom of expression and the Inspector General, Thrissur, had been asked to inquire into the way the police proceeded in the two cases, he said replying to demands for grants for his departments in the state assembly.
Critical write-ups and cartoons on political leaders had been carried by journals and magazines earlier also. The government could not agree with taking action against magazine editors simply because it contained material criticising Modi, he said.
Faced with legal action and political protests from BJP, the Sree Krishna College yesterday withdrew its campus magazine which contained unsavoury remarks against Modi.
Nine students of the college, including its student editor and editorial panel members, were arrested and let off on bail on Sunday.
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They had been charged under various sections of the Indian Penal Code including 153 (wantonly giving provocation with intent to cause riot).
In a similar case, the campus magazine of the polytechnic featured Modi in the list of "negative faces" along with Adolf Hitler, Osama Bin Laden, George Bush and a few other internationally-known figures.
The principal and a few students of the polytechnic were arrested and let off on bail last week after police had charged them under the same sections of the IPC.
In both the institutions, the student unions are controlled by CPI-M's student outfit SFI.