The report said ten sitting Lok Sabha Members of Parliament with such declared cases are from BJP. (File)

A total of 58 current Members of Parliament and MLAs have declared cases related to hate speech, with BJP having the maximum number of such politicians, a report by Delhi-based think-tank Association for Democratic Reforms or ADR said."15 sitting Lok Sabha MPs have declared cases related to hate speech against themselves. None of the Rajya Sabha MPs have declared cases related to hate speech," the report said.Ten sitting Lok Sabha Members of Parliament with such declared cases are from BJP, and one each from AIUDF or All India United Democratic Front, TRS or Telangana Rashtra Samithi, PMK (Paattali Makkall Katchi), AIMIM and SHS (Shiv Sena), it said.BJP has 27 lawmakers with such cases, All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) has 6, TRS (6), TDP (3), SHS (3), AITC (2), INC (2), IND (2), JD(U) (2), AIUDF (1), BSP (1), DMK (1), PMK (1) and SP (1), the ADR report added."Political party leaders such as Asaduddin Owaisi or AIMIM and Badruddin Ajmal (AIUDF) have declared cases related to hate speech against themselves," ADR said.Union Cabinet Minister for Drinking Water and Sanitation Uma Bharti also has declared hate speech case against her, the report added. There are 43 sitting MLAs who have declared hate speech cases.Among party-wise distribution of MLAs, 17 sitting MLAs with such declared cases are from BJP, five each are from TRS and AIMIM, three from TDP, two each from INC, AITC, JD(U) and SHS, one each from DMK, BSP, SP and two Independent MLAs, the report added.ADR and National Election Watch or NEW have analysed the self-sworn affidavits of all sitting MPs and MLAs. The analysis reveals that many of them have declared cases related to hate speech.The analysis is based on the affidavits submitted by the candidates and MPs/MLAs prior to the last election they contested.Uttar Pradesh has 15 MPs, MLAs with declared cases related to hate speech, followed by Telangana (13), Karnataka (5) and Maharashtra (5), among others.The report further said 11 sitting MLAs with such cases are from Telangana, four from Bihar, nine from Uttar Pradesh and four from Maharashtra.Besides, three MLAs each are from Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, two each from Uttarakhand and West Bengal and one MLA each from Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan and Jharkhand.ADR said it believes that strict action must be taken against the candidates giving hate speech prior and during elections, and against the elected legislators even after elections, if found guilty of indulging in hate speech."Political parties must not give tickets to candidates who have declared serious criminal cases against themselves. Cases against MPs and MLAs should be fast tracked and decided upon in a time bound manner," ADR said in its recommendations.On Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had asked BJP leaders to refrain from making "irresponsible" statements, saying such comments hurt the party's image.

In the last five years, 198 candidates with declared cases related to hate speech have contested elections for state assemblies, Lok/Rajya Sabha.Also, in the last five years, 28 independent candidates with declared cases related to hate speech have contested elections for state assemblies, Lok/Rajya Sabha.