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Orissa High Court dismisses petition challenging ban on Sri Aurobindo biography

By LE Desk

Cuttack, April 27: The petition filed by Peter Heehs, author of ‘The Lives of Sri Aurobindo’, in the Orissa High Court challenging the ban imposed by the State government on the book has been finally dismissed after nine years.

The Columbia University Press in USA had published the biography. A gazette notification on the ban by the State government was published on April 9, 2009. Heehs had filed the petition seeking quashing of the ban in 2012.

A three-judge bench of Chief Justice S Muralidhar, Justice CR Dash and Justice BP Routray dismissed the petition on April 22 as it was filed more than two years after the ban was notified, The New Indian Express reported.

The bench endorsed the government’s contention that norms prescribed filing of such petitions within a maximum period of two months of notification of an order, but the petition was filed after over two years.

In a written note submitted on April 7, the government had also contended that the author had clearly and intentionally overstepped his historian credentials (colonial bias) which promote communal disaffection affecting public peace and tranquillity.

In 2008, a petition seeking intervention against publication of the book in India was filed in the Orissa High Court. Balasore-based Gitanjali Devi filed the petition alleging that the author had in the guise of a biography cast aspersions on the Sri Aurobindo’s image as a sage.

On November 4, 2008, the Court imposed restrictions on publication of the biography without obtaining a ‘no objection certificate’ from the Union Information and Broadcasting Ministry and the Union Home Ministry. The Court also asked the State CID-Crime Branch to carry out an investigation. 

In March 2009, the State Home department informed the Court that the State government had decided to enforce a ban on the book as CID-Crime Branch reports indicated that circulation of the book would outrage the religious feelings of the people. The government published the gazette notification on the ban on April 9, 2009.

https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/odisha/2021/apr/25/orissa-high-court-dismisses-petition-challenging-ban-on-sri-aurobindo-biography-2294589.html

Court allows Chandigarh cops to give Remidesivir to health department

By LE Desk

Chandigarh, April 26: In a significant development, a local court has allowed the UT police to hand over at least 2,970 Remdesivir injections to the office of Director of Health and Family Welfare Services, for further distribution to government hospitals in the city.

These injections were part of the illegal consignment seized from a pharmaceutical company in Baddi tow in Himachal Pradesh last week. Thirty of these injections have been sealed and sent to a laboratory for examination of their authenticity.

SP Ketan Bansal on April 25 said, “We moved an application in the district courts, Sector 43, seeking permission to hand over these injections to the health services for further distribution to hospitals for Covid-19 patients. The court today accepted our plea. We will hand over these injections to the health department soon. We are also planning to send the 30 samples for examination to Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission (IPC) in Ghaziabad’’, The Indian Express reported.

Of late, there has been an acute shortage of antiviral injections such as Remdesivir and Tocilizumab in the region.

Sources said, “UT administrator VP Singh Badnore had directed Adviser Manoj Parida, and DGP Sanjay Baniwal to find out legal ways to help Covid patients use these drugs.” Pharmacists say a limited stock came to Chandigarh and was sold off within hours.

A Special Investigation Team (SIT) headed by SP Ketan Bansal had seized the injections and arrested six people, including the director of Health Biotech Limited, on April 17. Later, an accused from Kerala tested Covid positive, and was admitted to GMSH-16. The other five accused tested negative.

https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/chandigarh/court-allows-chandigarh-cops-to-give-remidesivir-to-health-department-7289104/

Don’t insist on Covid report during admission: Delhi High Court to hospitals

By LE Desk

New Delhi, April 26: The Delhi High Court today directed hospitals in the national capital to “scrupulously follow” the AAP government’s circular on not insisting on COVID positive test reports before admitting patients showing symptoms of coronavirus.

A bench of Chief Justice D N Patel and Justice Jasmeet Singh also directed the Delhi government to “widely publicise” its April 23 circular on the matter, news agency PTI reported.

The order came while disposing of a PIL seeking directions to the Delhi government to order hospitals not to insist on COVID positive reports to hospitalise patients who show symptoms of coronavirus.

The petitioner, Jaideep Ahuja, told the bench that the Uttar Pradesh government has passed such a direction on not insisting on RT PCR positive test reports for admitting patients.

The Delhi government told the court that its Health department has issued a circular on April 23 directing hospitals in the city not to insist on COVID positive test reports to admit patients who are showing symptoms of coronavirus infection.

The Delhi government told the bench that such patients would be kept in a dedicated area, in hospitals, meant for suspected cases. 

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/dont-insist-for-covid-report-during-admission-delhi-high-court-to-hospitals-2422000

Courts should not enlarge history sheeters on bail with “blinkered vision”: Supreme Court

By LE Desk

New Delhi, April 26: The Supreme Court has said that courts should not enlarge history sheeters on bail with a “blinkered vision” and must consider the impact of their release on witnesses and innocent members of the family of the victim. 

A bench headed by Chief Justice (now retired) S A Bobde made the observation while setting aside the order of the Allahabad High Court granting bail to an accused, news agency PTI reported.

The top court said there is no doubt that liberty is important, even that of a person charged with crime but it is important for courts to recognise the potential threat to the life and liberty of victims/witnesses, if such an accused is released on bail.

“It is needless to point out that in cases of this nature, it is important that courts do not enlarge an accused on bail with a blinkered vision by just taking into account only parties before them and the incident in question. It is necessary for courts to consider the impact that release of such persons on bail will have on witnesses yet to be examined and innocent members of the family of the victim who might be the next victims,” the bench also comprising Justices A S Bopanna ans V Ramasubramanian said.

Referring to its earlier verdicts, the apex court said when a stand was taken that the accused was a history sheeter, it was imperative for high courts to scrutinise every aspect and not capriciously record that the accused was entitled to be released on bail on the ground of parity.

“We find in this case that the high court has overlooked several aspects, such as the potential threat to witnesses, forcing the trial court to grant protection,” it said.

The bench said the Allahabad High Court granted bail to the accused in this case on very liberal terms, such as the execution of a personal bond to the satisfaction of jail authorities and the furnishing of sureties within a month of his release.

The high court has simply ignored the antecedents of the accused and the potential to repeat his acts by organising his criminal activities, the top court bench said.

The apex court was hearing an appeal filed by one Sudha Singh, wife of Raj Narain Singh who was allegedly murdered by the accused, Arun Yadav, in conspiracy with others.

Singh, the 52-year-old president of the cooperative cell of Uttar Pradesh Congress Committee (UPCC), was shot near Belaisa in Azamgarh in 2015 when he had gone for a walk.

The accused is alleged to be a contract killer and a sharpshooter and has been prosecuted in fifteen cases for serious offences including murder, attempt to murder and criminal conspiracy.

Referring to the recent incident involving UP gangster Vikas Dubey, the appeal contended that the grant of bail in a routine manner to gangsters, has had an adverse effect in the past, upon the law and order situation.

“The appellant cites the example of a person who was prosecuted in connection with 64 criminal cases which included cases of murders, offences of dacoity, criminal intimidation, extortion and offences under the UP-Gangster Act, etc, but who was released on bail. Ultimately, when a police team went to apprehend him in a case, allegedly eight policemen were killed and many grievously injured. Therefore, the appellant contends that courts must be extremely careful in releasing of history sheeters who have been charged with serious offences like murder, rape or other kinds of bodily harms several times,” the appeal said.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/india/courts-should-not-enlarge-history-sheeters-on-bail-with-blinkered-vision-supreme-court/articleshow/82240392.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Deep Sidhu, accused in Jan 26 violence, granted bail by Delhi court in 2nd case

By LE Desk

New Delhi, April 26: Actor-activist Deep Sidhu, accused of violence in the national capital on Republic Day, was today granted bail in the second case against him by the Tis Hazari court in Delhi. 

Sidhu who was arrested on February 9 in connection with the Red Fort violence on January 26 during the farmers’ tractor parade against the Centre’s three farm laws, can now walk free if not arrested in any other case. In its bail order, the court said that Sidhu’s “further incarceration in the present case would bear no fruit and therefore would be unjustified”, the Hindustan Times reported. Sidhu was granted bail on a personal bond of Rs. 25,000 with one surety of like amount by the court.

In its order, the court observed, “The prosecution seeks to make an example out of the case of the accused, he being a popular public figure, such an endeavour however hazards a failure of justice as a result of compromised objectivity’.”

“The sweeping power of investigation does not warrant subjecting a citizen each time to fresh investigation by the police in respect of the same incident, giving rise to one or more cognizable offences, consequent upon filing of successive FIRs whether before or after filing the final report,” the order added, as reported by the Hindustan Times.

The court also noted that Sidhu had already been interrogated in police custody for 14 days and been in custody for about 70 days when he has been granted regular bail in the first case earlier this month by a local court in Delhi. After the bail then, Sidhu was arrested again on the same day on the basis of an FIR filed by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) in connection with Republic Day violence.

Remarking on the bail granted to Sidhu on April 17, the court said in its order, “The need and timing of the arrest is highly questionable because despite knowing that the accused has been lodged in JC since 09.02.2021, he was arrested only on 17.04.2021, when he was granted regular bail in FIR No.96/2021. This clearly suggests that it was an attempt to defeat the bail order dated 16.04.2021 of the Ld. ASJ and is a grave affront to personal liberty of the accused and runs foul of rights guaranteed under Article 21.”

Sidhu, who is a Punjabi actor was arrested on charges of inciting protesters during the tractor rally which was organised by farmers protesting against the three contentious farm bills on Republic Day. The rally turned violent with farmers breaking police barricades and clashing with the personnel at several places. Hundreds of farmers also stormed Red Fort, damaged property and clashed with the policemen there.

Thousands of farmers, mostly from Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh, have been camping at three border points of Delhi- Singhu, Tikri (along Haryana), and Ghazipur- demanding a repeal of the three farm laws enacted by the Centre in September last year. The three contentious laws include the Farmers’ Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, the Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Act, and the Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/deep-sidhu-accused-in-jan-26-violence-granted-bail-by-delhi-court-in-2nd-case-101619415930575.html

Northeast Delhi riots: Court pull up police, says complete lack of supervision by senior officers in many cases

By LE Desk

New Delhi, April 26: A Delhi court today dismissed a review petition filed by the police challenging a Metropolitan Magistrate’s order over registering an FIR in the Northeast Delhi riots case, saying that in “several cases” it has noticed a “complete lack of supervision of the investigation(s) by the senior police officers of the district”.

As per the court’s records, Nisar Ahmad had filed a complaint with SHO Gokulpuri on 25 February, 2020, regarding a mob from a particular community vandalising and looting his house. Ahmad claimed that the police took down a very small complaint regarding the theft.

On March 18, at the Eidgah relief camp in Mustafabad, Ahamd gave a detailed complaint stating how a mob of 200-250 people was mobilised using a public address system, where “a clarion call was being given to the persons of a particular community to go and vandalise and put on fire the houses of persons of another community”, The Indian Express reported.

Ahmad’s complaint was clubbed with another complaint in which no accused was named.

Following arguments by Ahmad’s lawyer, MR Shamshad, a Metropolitan Magistrate on November 19, 2020, ordered the police to register a separate FIR in this case which was challenged by the police.

Additional Sessions Judge Vinod Yadav dismissed the revision petition of the police observing, “I do not find even semblance of investigation with regard to the criminal conspiracy hatched by the persons named in complaint dated 18.03.2020, by either the local police who investigated the matters under consideration as well as by Special Cell, which investigated the case of larger conspiracy.”

Noting that the “investigating agency has evidently been found to be on the wrong side of law”, the court said, “Even the offence of criminal conspiracy has not been invoked in any of the cases where either the respondent is complainant or witness. There is clear diversions of action/investigation by the police in the cases under consideration and case FIR No.60/2020, PS Dayalpur (HC Rattan Lal murder case), where the persons who participated at the protest site in the capacity of organisers have been made accused persons. There are clear allegations by the respondent against the named police official(s) of PS Gokalpuri, who had refused to register FIR on his complaint and forced him to give merely complaint of theft (complaint dated 04.03.2020)”, as reported by The Indian Express.

In many cases, 25 complaints have been clubbed into a single FIR having different dates of incidents, different complainants, different witnesses and different set of accused persons.

Relying on a slew of judgments, the court stated: “The issue of clubbing and joining the investigation of different complaints into one FIR is basically to protect the accused, even if the offence is same.”

https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/delhi/northeast-delhi-riots-court-pull-up-police-7289682/

NIA court rejects bail to 18 accused in DJ Halli case

By LE Desk

Bengaluru, April 26: A Special Court for National Investigation Agency (NIA) cases rejected bail for 18 persons accused of being involved in the DJ Halli riots, and booked under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Two separate petitions were filed by the accused before the court, and both were rejected by Special Court judge Kasanappa Naik, on April 23, The New Indian Express reported. 

The accused, Syed Khalid, Mudasir Ahmed, Syed Mubarak alias Dicchi Mubarak, Mohammed Thousif, Shabaz M, Arif Pasha, Farooq, Shameel Pasha and Tanveer Khan had filed a petition seeking bail, and their advocate had argued that the petitioners were not members of any terrorist organisation. The petition said that police, without proper investigation, were acting in a biased manner against them. The prosecution had objected to bail by submitting offences committed by each accused.

The court stated that it was clearly not a simple case of rioting, but there was a conspiracy to commit the offences by the accused. “…the accused have gone to the extent of toppling the vehicle of the DCP and also burning a number of motorcycles of police personnel and private parties. These and other accused have caused extensive damage to the police station.”

The other petition was filed by Syed Ikramuddin alias Syed Naveed, Shaikh Muhammed Bilal, Syed Asif, Mohammed Atif, Mohammed Mudassir Kaleem, Naqeeb Pasha, Imran Ahmed, Mohammed Azhar, and Kareem alias Saddam, but the court stated the allegations against the petitioners is serious and rejected the bail application.

https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/karnataka/2021/apr/26/nia-court-rejects-bail-to-18-accused-in-dj-halli-case-2294848.html

Election Commission officers should be booked for murder: Madras HC slams ECI for rise in Covid cases

By LE Desk

Chennai, April 26: The Madras High Court today strongly pulled up the Election Commission of India for allowing political rallies even as the country is battling a deadly second wave of COVID-19. 

Madras High Court Chief Justice Sanjib Banerjee reprimanded the Election Commission for failing to ensure COVID-19 norms were followed during rallies, remarking that Election Commission is “singularly responsible” for the second wave of COVID-19, The News Minute reported.

“Election Commission officers should be booked on murder charges probably,” Justice Sanjib Banerjee remarked, as per media reports. When the election commission’s counsel said that measures have been taken to curb the spread of COVID-19, the Madras High Court Chief Justice remarked: “Were you on another planet when political rallies were being held?”  

“Public health is of paramount importance and it is distressing that constitutional authorities have to be reminded in such regard. It is only when a citizen survives that he’ll be able to enjoy the rights that a democratic republic guarantees,” Chief Justice Banerjee told the Election Commission, as reported by The News Minute. 

Tamil Nadu is one of the states that went to polls on April 6 this year. The High Court also warned that it will stop counting on May 2, which is when the results are to be declared for elections in five states and one Union Territory, if the Election Commission does not put in place a proper plan to ensure COVID-19 norms are followed.

“The situation now is of survival and protection. Everything else comes next,” the Chief Justice said.

The High Court has directed the Election Commission to hold a consultation with the State Health Secretary and place on record a plan to enforce COVID-19 protocol on counting day by April 30.

Tamil Nadu’s single-day coronavirus cases tally crossed the 15,000 mark on Sunday, pushing the total case count to 10.81 lakh till date. As many as 82 deaths were recorded in the last 24 hours, taking the toll to 13,557 so far, the health department said.

The state registered 15,659 fresh cases while recoveries mounted to 9,63,251 today with 11,065 patients being discharged, a bulletin said. Chennai continued to constitute the bulk of the total cases accounting for 4,206 new infections, totalling 3,09,899 till date. The metropolis also leads in the number of fatalities with 4,467 people succumbing to the virus.

Tamil Nadu on Sunday observed complete lockdown, the first during the current wave of the coronavirus pandemic, with the operation of only essential services. Roads were deserted as people remained indoors.

https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/election-commission-officers-should-be-booked-murder-madras-hc-slams-eci-147844

Supreme Court remembers Justice MM Shantanagoudar, suspends hearings

By LE Desk

New Delhi, April 26: The Supreme Court today suspended its judicial work as a mark of respect to its serving judge Justice MM Shantanagoudar who passed away last week. All the hearings scheduled today have been postponed to tomorrow.

Justice Shantanagoudar, 62, died at a private hospital in Gurugram on Saturday night after prolonged illness.

Newly-appointed Chief Justice of India Justice NV Ramana led the condolence meet in the Supreme Court premises. “We are deeply pained and untimely death of Justice Shantanagouder. All hearings today stand suspended. All matters listed today will be taken up tomorrow,” Chief Justice Ramana said, as reported by NDTV.

Justices RF Nariman, AM Khanwilkar, UU Lalit, L Nageswara Rao, DY Chandrachud, S Ravindra Bhat and Hrishkesh Roy also joined the condolence meet.

Attorney General K K Venugopal, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, Senior advocate and Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) President Vikas Singh attended the meeting virtually.

Justice Shantanagoudar was elevated as a judge of the Supreme Court on February 17, 2017. He would have remained in office till May 5, 2023.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/supreme-court-remembers-justice-mm-shantanagoudar-suspends-hearings-2421995

Supreme Court judge Justice Mohan M Shantanagoudar dies at 62

By LE Staff

New Delhi, April 25: Sitting Supreme Court judge Justice Mohan M Shantanagoudar died at a private hospital in Gurgaon after prolonged illness, sources said on Sunday. He was 62.

Justice M Shantanagoudar was admitted to the Medanta hospital due to a lung infection and was in the ICU, the sources said. The sources neither confirmed nor denied whether the judge was suffering from Covid-19.

His condition was stated to be stable till late Saturday night but around 12.30 am, the doctors attending him broke the news of his demise to the family, a court official told news agency PTI.

Justice Shantanagoudar, who was suffering from lung cancer, was also infected with Covid-19 last year.

Justice Shantanagoudar was elevated as a judge of the Supreme Court on February 17, 2017.

He was born on May 5, 1958, in Karnataka and got himself enrolled as an advocate on September 5, 1980.

He was appointed as an additional judge of the Karnataka High Court on May 12, 2003, and became a permanent judge in the court in September 2004.

Later, he was transferred to the Kerala High Court, where he assumed charge as the Acting Chief Justice on August 1, 2016.

He became the Chief Justice of the Kerala High Court on September 22, 2016, before being elevated as a top court judge.

One of his closet colleagues in the Supreme Court, Justice Vineet Saran, with whom Justice Shantanagoudar shared the Supreme Court bench in his last working days, still remembers the last coffee he had with late judge.

“When I went over for a cup of coffee with him recently, he (justice Shantanagoudar) was as lively as he always had been… although not as strong. I had known him since our days at the Karnataka high court which was his parent high court. We shared an excellent rapport. Even as Supreme Court judges, our houses were right opposite each other in Delhi. And the deal was to meet as often as we could,” recounted Justice Saran, said the Hindustan Times.

Recalling some fond memories about Justice Shantanagoudar, Justice Saran told Hindustan Times that he was enamoured by the late judge’s sense of humour. “Off the bench or on it, Justice Santanagoudar would often come up with a great sense of humour. He brought liveliness to the regular court proceedings. We would break into laughter along with the lawyers and the pressure of the proceedings was out. I feel privileged to have sat with him on the bench during his last days,” he said.

Justice Shantanagoudar sat with Justice Saran during the last four months. He was not able to speak properly after one side of his vocal cord was paralysed due to the cancer.

“But justice Shanatanagoudar would still want to sit on the bench, hear arguments and will also want to write judgments. I would advise him not to exert so much. But he used to tell me that the court and the judgments kept him going. He said this kept him occupied,” reminisced Justice Saran, who was there at Gurugram’s Medanta Hospital when Justice Shantanagoudar breathed his last on Saturday at around 10.15pm.

Justice Saran said he will remember Justice Shantanagoudar as a compassionate man and an excellent, thorough judge, the Hindustan Times reported.

Chief Justice of India NV Ramana also issued a statement at his demise, expressing grief: “I was hoping for his speedy and complete recovery and his return to the bench at the earliest. The news of his passing has come as a rude shock. I have lost a valuable colleague.”

Justice Shantanagoudar, during his short tenure, was associated with many significant judgments.

Through a ruling in February, Justice Shantagoudar obligated the banks to ensure safe custody of valuables in their lockers, holding that the banks cannot wash off their hands and claim that they bear no liability towards their customers for the operation of the locker.

Authoring another important judgment, he showed his concerns for private liberty and said that trial courts were duty-bound to inform the accused about their right of default bail when the investigating agencies fail to complete the probe within the time limit mandated by law. In yet another judgment evoking concerns for personal liberty, a Justice Shantanagoudar-led bench ruled that courts must not punish an accused if they have not been provided proper legal aid.

When a man filed a habeas corpus petition for his wife who was lodged in a shelter home in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly against her wishes, Justice Shantanagoudar recorded that a major woman must “live as per her wish” and ordered for her immediate release.

Coming to the rescue of small farmers, Justice Shantagoudar held in a judgment in March 2020 that a farmer is entitled to file a consumer complaint against a seed company for deficiency of service.

Within a year of coming to the top court, he made his presence felt by going against the majority of two senior judges in a bunch of cases relating to land acquisition. While the two senior judges in February 2018 held an old judgment delivered by a bench of same strength of three judges as per incuriam (lacking in care), Justice Shantanagoudar dissented with the majority view and said the case should be referred to a larger bench. This case was eventually decided by a larger bench of five judges, as he had opined.

***

‘We’re calling it wave, it’s actually tsunami’: Delhi HC on Covid crisis

By LE Desk

New Delhi, April 24: The Delhi High Court today asked the Centre about the preparedness to deal with the expected COVID-19 second wave peak in mid-May, terming the massive rise in cases as a tsunami’, and warned it will “hang” any person who tries to obstruct oxygen supplies to hospitals here.

Talking tough, a bench of Justices Vipin Sanghi and Rekha Palli, said this during a special hearing on a holiday on the issue of mounting oxygen crisis in various hospitals in Delhi, news agency PTI reported.

The court said the viral disease has a low mortality and those who have a low immunity will eventually die but the problem comes when people who could be saved are also dying. “The mortality rate needs to be reduced.”

Referring to a study by a team of scientists from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kanpur, the court noted its assessment that the peak of this COVID wave will come in mid-May.

We are calling it a wave, it is actually a tsunami, the court said, and asked the Centre about the preparedness in terms of infrastructure, hospitals, medical staff, medicines, vaccines and oxygen as on date for the peak.

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing the Centre, said there might be a rapid rise in the number of cases in May and June and the country needs to be ready for the worst.

He said the Prime Minister and others are working on it and have decided to import oxygen and are also exploring the remotest possibility of generating oxygen from wherever it is possible.

The court was hearing submissions by the counsel for Maharaja Agrasen Hospital, Jaipur Golden Hospital, Batra Hospital and Saroj Super Speciality Hospital here over shortage of oxygen for treating seriously-ill COVID patients.

“We will hang that man. We will not spare anyone,” the court said while telling the Delhi government to give one instance of any official at the central, state or local administration obstructing the pickup of oxygen supplies.

The court told the Delhi government to inform the Centre also about such officials of the local administration so that it could take action against them.

It also asked the Centre when the 480 metric tonne (MT) of oxygen per day allocated for Delhi would see the light of the day.

“You (Centre) had assured us (on April 21) that 480 MT per day will reach Delhi. Tell us when will it come? The 480 MT per day is still to see the light of the day.”

The query came after the Delhi government said it was getting only 380 MT oxygen per day over the past few days and it received only around 300 MT on Friday.

During the hearing, the court also questioned the Delhi government officers as to what endeavour they have made to secure tankers to get the supply of oxygen allocated to it by the Centre.

https://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/covid-won-t-spare-anyone-who-obstructs-oxygen-supply-says-delhi-hc-121042400357_1.