Kejriwal, who initially filed a plea through his counsel for exemption from personal appearance for the day, appeared before Metropolitan Magistrate Abhilash Malhotra, who said the accused has to first establish his identity before the court and there should be a valid ground for seeking exemption.
The court said the offence of defamation was bailable and granted bail to Kejriwal on furnishing a personal bond of Rs 10,000 and a surety of the like amount.
The submission, however, did not go down well with the court which asked the counsel to show where does the law says that the accused is exempted till the time his application is pending.
"Where under the law it is written that till an application is pending you (accused) are exempted from appearance? Show me the law, I have to decide it today only," the magistrate said, adding there was no immunity to chief ministers from appearance.
The court said that Constitution has given immunity to the President and Governors and not to Chief Ministers.
When the court asked Kejriwal's counsel to show it the law on the issue, it was decided that the chief minister will appear.
When the counsel maintained calling the Chief Minister to court has caused inconvenience to general public, the magistrate said he was also doing his constitutional duty by seeking the presence of the accused before the court.
The court also allowed Chauhan's plea seeking personal
exemption from appearance for the day on the ground that he was in Lucknow as he has been recently appointed a minister in Uttar Pradesh.
"Since the complaint has not been filed by the aggrieved person (natural person), the court cannot take cognizance under the provision of CrPC and further proceedings against Kejriwal may be dropped," the plea said.
BJP MP Kirti Azad, a co-accused who is on bail in the case, also moved an application seeking discharge. The court directed DDCA and Chauhan to file their reply on the next date of hearing on April 1.
The plea has claimed that defamatory statements were made by Kejriwal and Azad, who himself is a member of DDCA, "to remain in the public eye and gain political mileage".
"In an interview to a news channel, Kejriwal had alleged that apart from financial irregularities, there were other major wrongdoings in DDCA, including a sex racket," the plea has alleged.
The allegation against Azad was that he endorsed the defamatory allegations made by Kejriwal and claimed he had raised a similar issue in 2007.
