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Andhra CM Jagan Mohan Reddy complains to CJI against Supreme Court judge

New Delhi, October 11: In an unprecedented move, Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy has urged Chief Justice of India S.A. Bobde to ensure that the State’s judicial neutrality is maintained.

In a letter addressed to Chief Justice Bobde, Jagan alleged that Supreme Court judge Justice N.V. Ramana had been influencing the sittings of the High Court, including the roster of a few judges and cited instances of how matters important to the opposition Telugu Desam Party had been ‘allocated to a few judges’, along with copies of orders passed in a few matters.

He cited the recent order passed by the Chief Justice of the High Court in a writ petition No. 16468 of 2020 filed by former Advocate-General Dammalapati Srinivas, staying investigation in the FIR lodged against Srinivas and a gag order on the press, against which an SLP was preferred, The Hindu reported.

“While the Supreme Court of India has been steadfast in ensuring no prior restraint on publication by media, a gag order on the media is passed in the above WP. Justice D.V.S.S. Somayajulu passed an interim order on October 16, the very next day of the gag order, staying all further proceedings arising from the Cabinet sub committee report, even after being apprised that the matter is before the Union of India,” Jagan said.

Stating that the beneficiaries of both the judgments of the High Court were clearly the politicians of the TDP, Jagan said Justice Ramana was a legal adviser and additional advocate-general in the previous government of the TDP.

The Chief Minister said the State government formed a sub-committee by GO no. 1411 on June 26, 2019, to examine the allegations of unbridled corruption, ruthless exploitation of natural resources, grabbing of lands from small and marginal farmers.

After the sub-committee submitted its findings, referring to the amassing of wealth by TDP president N. Chandrababu Naidu and others by adopting various illegal means to the Assembly, the government forwarded the report to the Union of India urging for a CBI inquiry.

In view of the above, the Chief Minister urged the Chief Justice of India to consider initiating steps to ensure that the State’s judicial neutrality was maintained.

Adviser to the Chief Minister Ajeya Kallam told reporters on Saturday night that the State government had submitted all evidences to the Chief Justice of India pertaining to “interference by a sitting Supreme Court judge in matters dealt by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh”.

“In larger public interest and in order to put to rest the speculations in a section of media concerning these developments, the government deemed it fit to officially speak on the above to ensure the dignity of all the institutions of the State is preserved. The Government of Andhra Pradesh filed Special Leave Petitions against the orders of Justice D.V.S.S. Somayajulu of the High Court staying all further proceedings of Cabinet Sub-Committee and the order of Chief Justice Jitendra Kumar Maheswari staying investigation and a gag order on the reportage of FIR filed against a former A-G and family members of a sitting SC judge in what is now being referred by Amaravati Land Scam. The government has apprised the recent happenings in the High Court and in particular reference to the intervention of a sitting Supreme Court judge, Justice N.V. Ramana, in the proceedings of the High Court,’’ said Kallam.

Kallam said that the State government placed all the evidences along with a covering letter written by the Chief Minister to the Chief Justice of India on October 8.

https://www.thehindu.com/elections/andhra-pradesh-assembly/jagan-complains-to-cji-against-supreme-court-judge/article32825111.ece

Supreme Court to work with full strength from October 12

New Delhi, October 11: The Supreme Court will work with its pre-pandemic strength from October 12 as its 12 Benches with about 30 judges would assemble through videoconferencing daily. 

Five Benches of two to three judges in different combinations had been sitting on working days to hear around 20 cases daily since the outbreak of COVID-19 in March.

According to the apex court’s website, 10 Benches of two to three judges and two single judge Benches will sit daily from October 12 to hear cases.

The increased strength will double the output of the Supreme Court, which has decided not to start physical hearings yet due to the COVID-19 situation in the country.

The top court has been hearing matters through videoconferencing since March 23, two days before a nationwide lockdown was imposed to contain the spread of COVID-19.

As per the cause list for October 12, eight Benches will have three judges each and two other Benches with two judges each to hear cases. There will be two single-judge Benches to hear and decide transfer petitions, news agency PTI reported.

After the pandemic hit the country, the apex court’s registry has been functioning with a reduced number of staffers due to various reasons, including lack of adequate public transport facilities.

“To facilitate the lawyers and litigants, who may face difficulty in joining the video conferencing, 12 facilitation rooms have been created, out of which five facilitation rooms are functional from Additional Building Complex of the Supreme Court of India and seven VC facilitation rooms are functional, one each from the District Court Complex of Delhi. Technical VC assistance is provided in the VC facilitation rooms,” the apex court had said.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/supreme-court-to-work-with-full-strength-from-october-12/article32830017.ece

Plea in Court seeks to allow Special Marriage Act to apply to all couples

New Delhi, October 8: A same-sex couple on Thursday urged the Delhi High Court to issue directions to allow the Special Marriage Act to apply to all couples regardless of their gender identity.

A single-judge bench of Justice Navin Chawla, however, referred the matter to a division bench, which is dealing with similar kind of matter and listed it for hearing next week, NDTV reported.

The couple has urged the High Court to declare that the Special Marriage Act, 1954, as unconstitutional insofar as it does not provide for solemnisation of marriage between a same-sex couple and to issue direction for declaring that the Special Marriage Act, 1954 ought to apply to all couples regardless of their gender identity and sexual orientation.

The petition filed by the same-sex couple has also sought directions to concerned authorities to register their marriage under the Special Marriage Act, 1954.

The petitioner told the court that they have been in a relationship for the last eight years, live together, share finances and look after the father of one of them, who is over 88 years old.

One of the petitioners is a psychiatrist while the other one is a therapist. The two couple are part of a team that built North India’s leading clinic specialising in mental health and learning disabilities for children and young adults.

“They share the highs, the lows, the joys and sorrows of life; they go through the wear and tear of living together; they have the deep, unbreakable bond of two people who have come together in love,” the plea said.

Advocates for the petitioner, Arundhati Katju, Govind Manoharan, Surabhi Dhar and senior advocate Menaka Guruswamy, submitted that the marriage is not just a relationship between two individuals but it brings two families together.

“But it is also a bundle of rights. Without marriage, the Petitioners are strangers in law. Articles 21 of the Constitution of India protects the right to marry a person of one’s choice: this right applies with full force to same-sex couples, just as it does to opposite-sex couples,” the plea said. 

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/plea-in-delhi-high-court-seeks-to-allow-special-marriage-act-to-apply-to-all-couples-2307109

Accused in sexual offence cases cannot access victim’s statement before probe is complete: SC

New Delhi, October 8: Attaching utmost confidentiality to statements given before a Magistrate by victims of sexual exploitation, the Supreme Court on Thursday held that such a statement cannot be shared with the accused till the investigation by the police in all aspects is over.

The decision has come as a big relief to the victims of sexual crime as there was a grey area with regard to the stage at which the statement of the victim recorded before the Magistrate under Section 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) could be shared with the accused, Hindustan Times reported.

This is the most crucial evidence given by the victim in a sexual crimes and has evidentiary value unlike the statement recorded before the police under Section 161 of CrPC. If the victim goes against her Section 164 statement, the trial court can proceed with perjury against the victim for lying on oath, besides discarding the same.

In 2014, the Supreme Court had held in State of Karnataka v Shivanna that soon after the victim’s Section 164 statement is recorded, the same must be handed over to the Investigation Officer with a specific direction that “contents of such statement under Section 164 are not disclosed to any person till charge sheet was filed.”

The present case decided by the apex court arose out of a November 7, 2019 order passed by the Allahabad High Court. This case related to a sexual assault complaint filed by a young woman in Shahjahanpur against former Union Minister and BJP leader Swami Chinmayanand.

The woman had recorded her Section 164 statement before a Judicial Magistrate on September 16, 2019. The next day, Chinmayanand sought a certified copy of her statement. His application was rejected by the Additional District and Sessions Judge, Shahjahanpur. Pursuant to this he was arrested and a charge sheet was filed by the police on November 5, 2019. He appealed to the Allahabad High Court and on November 7 obtained the Section 164 statement through an order passed in his favour by the HC. The HC referred to the 2014 SC ruling but held that the same applied to the police and not courts.

Setting aside this order, the SC held, “The High Court has completely erred in appreciating the directions of this Court, especially in a matter where offences alleged against the accused are of sexual exploitation. In such matters, utmost confidentiality is required to be maintained.”

Advocate Satya Mitra who assisted the Supreme Court in this matter said, “In trials involving sexual crimes, the victims can now be assured that whatever they tell the trial judge will be kept confidential. This decision has given hope to victims to seek justice against their perpetrators. Sadly, the victim in this case could not get benefit of this order.”

The victim in this case had filed the appeal in the Supreme Court on November 13 but by then her statement was made available to the alleged perpetrator of the crime. Although her lawyers received no instruction to pursue with the case, the Court proceeded to lay down the law after hearing both sides.

Going a step further in its 2014 decision, the bench, also comprising Justices Vineet Saran and SR Bhatt said, “No person is entitled to a copy of the statement recorded under Section 164 CrPC till appropriate orders are passed by the court after filing of charge sheet.” The Magistrate after receiving the charge sheet has the option to take cognizance of the charge sheet or has power under Sections 207, 208 of CrPC to order further investigation on certain aspects of the case.

“The right to receive a copy of such statement will arise only after cognizance is taken and at the stage contemplated by Sections 207 and 208 of the Code and not before,” the bench held.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/sexual-offenders-cannot-access-victim-s-statement-before-probe-is-complete-sc/story-U7KBb0IDeXJA3LGa8bdSgJ.htm

Hathras case: Allahabad High Court rejects plea of victim’s family against police ‘curbs’

Lucknow, October 8: The accused in the Hathras gang rape and murder case have written to the district police chief from jail claiming innocence in the incident and sought “justice” even as the Allahabad High Court dismissed a plea by the victim’s family seeking release from the alleged “illegal detention” of the U.P. police in their native village.

A Division Bench of Justices Prakash Padia and Pritinker Diwaker on Thursday noted that State government had already been directed to file affidavits clarifying its stand in the entire case by the Supreme Court, The Hindu reported.

“In the aforesaid facts and circumstances of the case, judicial propriety demands that it will not be proper for this Court to entertain the present petition on merits, especially when security has been provided to petitioners 1 to 6 and other family members of the deceased victim-girl on the observation made by the apex court,” said the HC. Similar directions had already been issued by the Lucknow Bench of the HC in a suo motu petition on October 1, the court added.

If the petitioners have any grievance, they are at liberty to file appropriate petition or application before the apex court, the HC said.

In a letter to SP Hathras, the accused Sandeep Singh claimed he and three others were falsely implicated in the case by the family of the victim.

The letter, also widely circulated on social media on Thursday, has thumb impressions of all four accused, the other three being Ravi, Lavkush and Ramu.

In the letter, Sandeep claims that he was acquainted with the victim and the two would speak on phone but the girl’s family did not approve of their friendship.

He also goes on to claim that on the day of the incident, he had met the victim in the fields and that she was accompanied by her brother and mother. Sandeep further claims through hearsay information that after he left the spot on the girl’s request, the girl’s brother and mother beat her up.

Alok Singh, Senior Superintendent, Aligarh Jail confirmed that Sandeep Singh had sent a letter to the SP Mathura. Officer Singh said he forwarded the letter to SP Hathras as per the rules.

Reacting to the letter, a female relative of the victim told a television channel that she sensed “plans” being played out to protect the four accused. “Stories are being pitched to save them. Everything is theirs, the ministers and the MPs are theirs. Who do we have? Poor people don’t have anyone except for God,” the woman said.

The family of the victim had filed a habeas corpus petition in the HC against their alleged illegal detention. The writ was moved by Surendra Kumar, the general secretary of the Akhil Bharatiya Valmiki Mahapanchayat on behalf of the family, through advocates Kashif Abbas Rizvi and Joun Abbas.

The petition also prayed for directing the administration to allow the family — the victim’s parents, two brothers, sister-in-law and grandmother — to move to Delhi as per their free will.

The petitioners alleged that that they were being restrained from exercising their fundamental right to free movement, and have been confined at their home. They also said they have been “prevented from meeting or communicating freely, thereby violating their Fundamental Right to freedom of speech and expression as well as the right to receive information”.

The State government counsel objected to the petition on several counts, prime among them that the matter was already sub-judice before the Supreme Court, hence the plea before the HC was not maintainable.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/allahabad-hc-rejects-plea-of-hathras-victims-family-against-police-curbs/article32806722.ece

Contempt case: Gujarat HC slaps Rs 2,000 fine on Yatin Oza

Ahmedabad, October 8: A division bench of the Gujarat High Court on Wednesday sentenced Gujarat High Court Advocates’ Association (GHAA) president Yatin Oza to its custody till “rising of the court” and imposed a penalty of Rs 2,000 on him for criminal contempt of court.

Till “rising of the court” implies that he had to be inside the courtroom till the bench concludes and rises for the day. However, given that proceedings are conducted virtually, it meant that Oza had to remain logged in till matters of the court were concluded.

A division bench of Justices Sonia Gokani and Justice NV Anjaria held that Oza will have to undergo an imprisonment of two months if he fails to pay the penalty, following an extended hearing on the quantum of punishment on Wednesday, The Indian Express reported.

After his advocates sought for a stay on the operation of the judgment, the court stayed its order for the statutory appeal period of 60 days so that Oza could file an appeal against the order under Section 19 of the Contempt of Courts Act.

Advocate Nisha Thakore, who appeared on behalf of the HC in the case, said, “The court said even at this stage it does not accept the unconditional apology that the respondent contemner had tendered in the past, and awarded him nominal sentence.”

Oza was unavailable for comment.

The Gujarat HC had taken suo motu cognisance of a press conference by Oza on June 5 where he had alleged favouritism by the court registry and its administration for “lawyers of billionaires (clients)” and had also alleged the HC administration of “corruption and malpractices”.

Initiating criminal contempt proceedings against Oza on June 9 for raising his “accusing fingers…against the High Court, High Court Administration and the Registry by irresponsible, sensational and intemperate delivery in an interview”, the court said he made “false and contemptuous allegations of corruption, malpractices against the administration of the High Court”.

Oza called the HC a “gambling den” to spread sensationalism, the court observed on June 9, while slapping him with the notice under Sections 2(c) and 15 of the Contempt of Courts Act for criminal contempt. A three-judge committee constituted to inquire into the allegations he made, gave the registry a clean chit and called Oza’s allegations “factually baseless”.

While this inquiry report was not part of the contempt proceedings’ record initially, amicus curiae and senior advocate Shalin Mehta, in a hearing in September, suggested that the same be added to the record after Oza’s advocates indicated that nowhere was it implied that Oza’s utterances at the contentious press conference was false or that they weren’t factually correct.

In July, the Full Court of Gujarat HC “unanimously resolved” to review and recall the “senior advocate” designation that was conferred on Oza in 1999. Oza’s civil writ, challenging this decision to divest him of his senior advocate designation, is pending before the Supreme Court.

The HC had repeatedly refused to accept Oza’s apology, citing that he has been a repeat offender over the years, when it comes to remarks against the court. An advocate practising at the HC had also moved an intervening application during the course of the contempt proceedings, seeking to be added as a party, with a view to bring on the court’s record, Oza’s history of making contemporaneous remarks against the institution.

The court had held Oza guilty of criminal contempt of the court on Tuesday. “…This court in exercise of powers conferred upon it under Article 215 of the Constitution of India and section 15 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, holds the respondent contemner guilty of committing criminal contempt of this court within the meaning of section 2(c)(i) of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971,” the HC said.

Oza’s plea at the SC seeking restoration of his senior advocate designation is due for hearing on October 13.

https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/ahmedabad/contempt-case-gujarat-hc-slaps-rs-2000-fine-on-yatin-oza-6706798/

Supreme Court pulls up Centre for “extremely offensive, brazen” response

New Delhi, October 8: Freedom of speech is among the most-abused liberties in recent times, the Supreme Court said Thursday in a case related to media reporting on the Tablighi Jamaat gathering at a Delhi mosque in violation of virus restrictions. The top court also berated the government for having a junior officer file what it called an “extremely offensive and brazen” response.

“Freedom of speech is one of the most abused freedoms in recent times,” Chief Justice SA Bobde commented during a hearing on petitions asking for action against the media for “spreading hatred” over the Tablighi meet at Markaz Nizamuddin, NDTV reported. The meeting in March generated a huge controversy as it became a coronavirus super-spreader with many cases across the country linked to those who had attended the gathering.

The Centre has defended the media in this case and said in its response to the Supreme Court that there was “no instance of bad reporting”. The Supreme Court pulled up the Centre on its affidavit and said it “must tell us instances of bad reporting” and what action had been taken.

The government has been asked to file another affidavit, this time by the Secretary of the Information and Broadcasting Ministry, on the petition seeking action against some TV channels.

“You cannot treat this court the way you are treating it. Some junior officer has filed the affidavit. Your affidavit is evasive and says petitioner shows no instance of bad reporting. You may not agree but how you can say there is no instance of bad reporting shown,” the Chief Justice questioned.

Referring to the petition citing alleged instances of fake news on the Tablighi Jamaat members, Justice Bobde said: “The Secretary must tell us what he thinks of the incidents pointed out by the petitioner. We find it extremely evasive. The affidavit does not make any response on the allegations made by the petitioners on some TV channels spreading hatred.”

Asking for a do-over, the Chief Justice sternly said the fresh affidavit “should not make unnecessary nonsensical averments”. 

The Supreme Court said it would take up the case after two weeks. 

The petitions were filed by the Jamiat-Ulema-I-Hind and others.

Besides the Chief Justice, the bench included Justices AS Bopanna and V Ramasubramanian. They heard the case through video-link.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/supreme-court-says-freedom-of-speech-one-of-the-most-abused-in-recent-times-2307014

Delhi HC asks government if it will challenge tribunal award in Vodafone tax case

New Delhi, October 8: The Delhi High Court has asked the government whether it would challenge an international tribunal’s award in the Vodafone Group tax case that had held India’s tax department in breach of the India-Netherlands Bilateral Investment Treaty. 

A division bench sought the clarification while hearing the government’s appeal against a single-judge bench’s order on the jurisdiction of another arbitration tribunal, The Economic Times reported. 

In 2018, Vodafone had initiated the second arbitration proceeding under the India-UK Bilateral Investment Protection Agreement, over the tax imposed on it for its $11 billion acquisition of the Indian assets of Hutchison in 2007. 

The government moved the high court against this second arbitration, but its petition was rejected. It then appealed before the division bench, which took up the plea on Wednesday. The court will hear the case next on November 17, people aware of the proceedings said. 

The matter came up for hearing after the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague had ruled in favour of the Vodafone Group and held that the Indian tax department’s demand was based on a retrospective amendment to the tax law and was in violation of the India-Netherlands agreement. 

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/delhi-hc-asks-govt-if-it-will-challenge-tribunal-award/articleshow/78541943.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Rhea Chakraborty case: How Bombay High Court dealt with Section 27A in detail

Mumbai, October 7: One of the major charges facing actor Rhea Chakraborty is Section 27A of the NDPS Act, under which one can be sent to jail for a maximum of 20 years for financing illicit traffic and harbouring offenders.

The NCB had claimed that since Rhea paid for drugs procured for her boyfriend and actor Sushant Singh Rajput, it amounted to financing illicit traffic and since she knew about his consumption of the drug, she had “harboured” him, making Section 27 A applicable on her.

The Bombay High Court dealt with this in detail, as reported by The Indian Express. 

To interpret the section, the court referred to statements on objectives and reasons behind the amendment of NDPS Act in 1989. The court said that the statement mentioned that India was facing a problem of transit traffic in illicit drugs. Drugs procured from a source would be brought here before being sent to other countries. The spillover from such traffic was causing problems of abuse and addiction in the country. The law was then amended to make it stronger and a separate section on “financing and harbouring” such activities was added.

The court said that while financing is not defined in the Act, it would necessarily refer to some activities involving illegal trade or business.

“The allegations against the applicant (Rhea) of spending money in procuring drugs for Rajput, will not, therefore, mean she had financed illlicit traffic,” the court said. It also said that harbouring someone would require it to be evading their arrest. Since Rajput was residing in his own house and had no apprehension of being arrested in any case, Rhea cannot be said to have harboured him.

It also accepted the defence lawyers’ submissions that if this interpretation of the section was to be applied, a friend or a relative paying for a consumption would get a 20-year punishment than the person who is consuming the drug, who would get away with a one-year punishment.

The court said that the section is to attack illicit drug trafficking but does not extend to sentencing another accused more severely than the main offender.

https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/mumbai/rhea-chakraborty-case-how-bombay-hc-dealt-with-section-27a-in-detail-6710389/

Rhea Chakraborty gets bail but high court sets 4 key conditions; her brother stays in jail

Mumbai, October 7: A month after actor Rhea Chakraborty was arrested, the Bombay high court on Wednesday granted her bail in a drug abuse case linked to actor Sushant Singh Rajput’s death case. Rhea was arrested by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) on September 8 for her alleged involvement in procuring marijuana for Rajput, also her boyfriend.

Rhea’s brother Showik will, however, continue to remain behind bars after his bail plea was rejected. The court also refused to grant bail to Abdel Basit Parihar, a final year student of architecture, who is accused of supplying narcotics to Sushant Singh Rajput, allegedly through Showik.

Justice Kotwal granted bail to Rhea on a personal bond of Rs 1 lakh and one or two sureties in the same amount. She has, however, been granted time to furnish sureties, paving the way for the immediate release of the 28-year-old actress, Hindustan Times reported.

The high court has directed Rhea to surrender her passport to the investigating officer and not to leave India. She is also restrained from leaving the jurisdiction of the special NDPS court in Mumbai without submitting itinerary to the special court. She will also have to report to the NCB office on the first Monday of every month for the next six months.

After the order was pronounced, additional solicitor general Anil Singh sought a stay on the order for at least one week. “This matter involves a number of questions of law and therefore we want to test this order (before the Supreme Court),” said Singh.

Justice Sarang V Kotwal refused to stay the order. “What do you want to test,” the judge asked Singh. “I have held that all offences under the NDPS (Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Act are non-bailable,” the judge added while rejecting the request.

After Singh’s request, HC ordered Rhea to visit the nearest police station everyday for the next ten days, so that she is easily available for re-arrest in case the NCB succeeds in its challenge to the order.

Justice Kotwal on Wednesday also granted bail to two ex-staffers of Rajput – his house manager Samuel Miranda and Dipesh Sawant, both of whom were also arrested by NCB on similar charges.

Both of them are ordered to be released on personal bonds of Rs 50,000 each and one or two sureties in the same amount. They too are ordered to surrender their passports and not to leave the jurisdiction of the special NDPS court in Mumbai.

NCB had started investigation into the drug angle to Rajput’s suicide after a trail of WhatsApp chats came to the fore revealing sale and purchase of drugs.

Arrested on September 4, Showik was accused of being in regular touch with two alleged drug peddlers, Abdul Basit Parihar and Kaizan Ebrahim, from whom he allegedly procured contraband material for consumption of the deceased actor. Rhea too was accused of procuring drugs and at times paying for the contraband material as well.

The siblings were, however, booked under stringent provisions like sections 8(c) read with 20(b)(ii) (produce, manufacture, possess, sell, purchase, transport, ware-house, use, consume, import, export or tranship cannabis other than ganja), 27A (financing illicit trafficking into drugs and harbouring offenders), 28 (attempt to commit offences under the Act) and 29 (abetment) of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/rhea-chakraborty-gets-bail-but-court-sets-4-key-condition/story-KTte0nxLy7vKnkGW7OwbmI.html

Public places cannot be occupied indefinitely: Supreme Court

New Delhi, October 7: The Supreme Court on Wednesday found the indefinite “occupation” of a public road by the Shaheen Bagh protestors unacceptable.

The court said the protest, considered an iconic dissent mounted by mothers, children and senior citizens of Shaheen Bagh against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), became inconvenient to commuters.

The 13-page judgment upheld the right to peaceful protest against a law but made it unequivocally clear that public ways and public spaces cannot be occupied, and that too indefinitely, The Hindu reported. 

“Democracy and dissent go hand in hand, but then the demonstrations expressing dissent have to be in designated places alone. The present case was not even one of protests taking place in an undesignated area, but was a blockage of a public way which caused grave inconvenience to commuters”, Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul, who authored the verdict for a three-judge Bench, observed.

The court suggested that the outcry may have even gone out of hand for the women protesters. It referred to reports about how women were ensconced inside a tent while a “huge periphery” of “male protesters, volunteers and bystanders”, who wanted the blockade to continue, milled around.

While the tent occupied half the road, the other half was blocked by a three-dimensional map of India, a large model of India Gate and even a library. Factors like the absence of leadership and many “influencers” and groups working at cross-purposes saw the movement slip out of the hands of the women of Shaheen Bagh.

“Thus, the Shaheen Bagh protest perhaps no longer remained the sole and empowering voice of women, who also appeared to no longer have the ability to call off the protest themselves. There was also the possibility of the protesters not fully realising the ramifications of the pandemic, coupled with a general unwillingness to relocate to another site”, the court observed.

It later noted that Shaheen Bagh seemed typical of the many digitally-fuelled “leaderless” dissent seen in modern times. Technology and social media could both empower and weaken mass movements.

“The ability to scale up quickly, for example, using digital infrastructure has empowered movements to embrace their often-leaderless aspirations and evade the usual restrictions of censorship. However, the flip side is that social media channels are often fraught with danger and can lead to the creation of highly polarised environments, which often see parallel conversations running with no constructive outcome evident”, Justice Kaul ruminated.

It was finally the gaining pandemic, which intervened like the “hand of God”, that led the protesters to relent and end the blockade, the court said. They were removed by the police from the site on March 24.

The seeds of protest and dissent were sown deep during the Freedom struggle. But dissent against the colonial rule cannot be equated with dissent in a self-ruled democracy, Justice Kaul reasoned. 

In a democracy, the rights of free speech and peaceful protest were indeed “treasured”. They were to be encouraged and respected, the court said. But these rights were also subject to reasonable restrictions imposed in the interest of sovereignty, integrity and public order. Police regulations also weighed in.

‘Fundamental rights do not live in isolation. The right of the protester has to be balanced with the right of the commuter. They have to co-exist in mutual respect’.

The judgment, based on a petition filed by advocate Amit Sahni, said the Delhi High Court should have intervened positively and not left the situation fluid. The administration too should have talked to the protesters.

“Unfortunately, despite a lapse of a considerable period of time, there was neither any negotiations nor any action by the administration, thus warranting our intervention,” the Supreme Court observed.

The court held it was entirely the responsibility of the administration to prevent encroachments in public spaces. They should do so without waiting for courts to pass suitable orders.

“The courts are not meant to give shoulder to the administration to fire their guns from,” Justice Kaul observed. 

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/shaheen-bagh-protest-occupying-public-places-for-protests-not-acceptable-says-sc/article32789318.ece