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          New Delhi, April 19 (IANS) The Delhi High Court Thursday   granted a permanent injunction against publishing or distributing the contents   of a CD allegedly depicting Congress spokesperson and senior advocate Abhishek   Manu Singhvi in a compromising position.
 |  The court's direction came after Mukesh Kumar Lal, Singhvi's former driver who   allegedly prepared the CD, informed the court in a written statement that the   matter was amicably settled between him and Singhvi.
 Justice Reva   Khetrapal taking on record the written submission filed by Lal passed the order   restricting media houses from disseminating the contents of the   CD.
 
 Counsel appearing for media houses Aaj Tak, Headlines Today and The   India Today Group informed the court that they would return the CD to the person   they got it from and would not telecast it.
 
 Singhvi's lawyer also told   the court that the complaint filed at Gulmohar Park police station in south   Delhi March 23 against Lal would be withdrawn as the matter had been amicably   settled.
 
 In the written statement filed by Lal, he said that he got four   "distorted CDs" made from a shopkeeper in Darbhanga (Bihar) and circulated to   two journalists.
 
 He claimed that he had done so because he wanted to take   a revenge from the Singhvi family because "one day Singhvis' dog had bitten my   wife and I felt that because of that my child was born physically   challenged".
 
 He said he was unhappy with his pay package. "In particular,   I was unhappy that the Singhvi family paid me so less compared to their high   income," he said.
 
 "Plaintiffs have assured me that the dispute between me   and the plaintiffs now stands settled amicably and that they shall not take any   legal action including seeking any damages in any police station or any court of   law in present or in future against me and withdraw the compliant/FIR (first   information report) no 102/12 against me made by the plaintiffs," said the   written statement filed by Lal.
 
 Singhvi with his former junior had moved   the court seeking a permanent injunction restraining Lal, Aaj Tak, Headlines   Today and the India Today Group from publishing, broadcasting or disseminating   the purported CD.
 
 According to the plea filed by Singhvi, his driver for   several years Lal left the job March 17 without any prior notice and later March   23 and 24 sent SMSes and called Singhvi to threaten and blackmail him about the   CD.
 
 Singhvi's petition claimed that the SMSes referred to a CD, which Lal   said he would distribute to all media houses, severely embarrassing and defaming   the name and reputation of Singhvi.
 
 The petition said: "Lal said that he   needs a very large amount of money or else he will start spreading false rumours   and allegations against Singhvi, including false statement regarding his moral   character and will go to the media and distribute a CD which allegedly depicts   alleged sexual acts made allegedly by Abishek Manu Singhvi and will not hesitate   from making other false claim."
 
 According to the petition, March 24 the   petitioner received calls from several senior political leaders about the   possession of the CD with journalists.
 
 Singhvi claimed that such a CD   either did not exist or if it did, it was clearly and obviously morphed,   fabricated and forged.
 
 
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