
Kunal Kamra moves High Court against Sahyog portal, calls it assault on free speech
The Hindu
Kunal Kamra challenges the Sahyog portal in court, claiming it infringes on free speech and violates constitutional rights.
Stand-up comedian Kunal Kamra has moved the Bombay High Court against the government’s 'Sahyog' portal, calling it an "unconstitutional and unreasonable" assault on freedom of speech, as it allows officials to take down social media content.
Editorial | Back door censor: On the government’s SAHYOG portal
The comedian, in his petition filed on Wednesday (February 4, 2026), has primarily challenged the IT rules, which were amended in October 2025, along with the Sahyog portal.
He had claimed that these tools "unlawfully" empower the Central and State government officials "to peremptorily issue takedown or blocking orders, without following the procedure mandated under the Information Technology Act".
According to the government, Sahyog was developed to automate the process of sending notices to intermediaries by the appropriate government or its agency under the IT Act, 2000, to facilitate the removal or disabling of access to any information, data or communication link being used to commit an unlawful act.
The portal aims to bring together all authorised agencies and intermediaries on one platform to ensure immediate action against the unlawful online information.













