A bench comprising Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justice A M Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachud set aside the NBW issued by the trial court last month, after the journalist's counsel said the warrant was issued because the apex court's July 24 order was not placed before the magistrate.
The apex court, in its July 24 order, had allowed Kishwar to participate in the court proceedings at Srinagar through video-conferencing from a Delhi court.
The top court had on September 15 stayed the NBW against Kishwar in the complaint filed by Syed Shujaat Bukhari, Editor-in-Chief of a daily published from Srinagar.
Kishwar had claimed that on the basis of a "few tweets" posted by her on her Twitter handle regarding the state of the media in Kashmir, the complaint was filed against her alleging that these tweets were defamatory.
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Kishwar had earlier approached the apex court challenging the May 24 order of the high court dismissing her plea seeking transfer of the criminal defamation complaint against her from a court in Srinagar to Jammu.
Her counsel had told the top court that the high court had failed to appreciate the "explosive and life-threatening law and order situation" in Srinagar and the risk it would pose to her life.
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