India is laying charge against her and that's called anti-freedom-of-speech.
It seems that you are inclined to twist and bend both the facts of the matter in order to create trouble. Neither part of your assertion is correct.
It is not India that is laying charges against her; an individual complained to a magistrate against the speech that she made - in fact, against several speeches - and the magistrate decided that there was a prima facie case of sedition. He then instructed the police to file charges, and to prosecute her. It remains to be seen if such a strange procedure is tenable.
Earlier, on the complaint of a section of the Opposition, the Home Minister looked into the question and concluded that there was nothing in the speeches that justified prosecution. That is the most accurate reflection of the thinking of the Government of India. The Delhi Commissioner of Police also stated categorically, on record, that nothing in her speech was actionable, and he was unable to see why she should be charged.
The behaviour of the individual concerned is not unfamiliar. There are such individuals, and there are publicity-seeking magistrates, who file charges against prominent individuals merely in order to be in the news. Many prominent film-stars find that this is a nuisance, as they are summoned by such frivolous charges to distant parts of the country.
One star who lives in Chennai had multiple charges against her, on the grounds of offending the modesty of women, because she expressed her personal point of view, her freedom of speech, if you like, in saying that she saw nothing sacred in the concept of virginity, nothing worthwhile in the insistence of bridegrooms with bad personal moral records that their brides should be virgin. She was harrassed for months before the Supreme Court consolidated all the cases, summoned them before itself, and ruthlessly cut through through the crap and ordered all the charges to be dismissed forthwith.
Ms. Roy has been making these speeches for more than a decade now, both before she became a famous writer, as she describes herself, and after; she has not been prosecuted before, as everyone was conscious that these views of hers were impractical as a blueprint for action leading to harmful consequences to the state. India has faced such speech-making before, and such strident campaigns for freedom-of-speech, and has, except for the brief period of the Emergency, managed to keep this freedom intact.
You need have no further fears, therefore, that 'India' is prosecuting Ms. Roy, or that this amounts to a violation of her right of free speech. Both Ms. Roy and her freedom of speech, just like mine and that of other Indians, are in good health.
Thank you very much for taking the interest that you took.