This was decided today by Delhi High Court's Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal, who is presiding over the tribunal set up under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).
The tribunal allowed the Centre's plea for in-camera hearing keeping in view the scheme of the Act, the allegations against IRF of radicalising the youth and confidentiality of the material to be scrutinised during the proceedings.
IRF had opposed the Centre's plea for in-camera hearing, saying it was a "garb" to deny them the material relied upon to ban the organisation.
Additional Solicitor General Sanjay Jain, on the other hand, had then contended that the "subject matter was sensitive" and there was a possibility that it could be disclosed during the proceedings before the tribunal.
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IRF had earlier moved the tribunal against the November 17, 2016 notification of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) imposing the ban on it.
Defending its decision before the high court, the government had claimed that the organisation was banned as there was an apprehension that youths could be "radicalised" to join terror groups. IRF had opposed the contention, saying no reason was given for the ban.
The Centre had said that Mumbai Police had lodged an FIR against six other members of IRF on a complaint by the father of a Kerala-based youth who had joined ISIS.
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