Eear avinash rajanna is continueing as commisoner

-original message-
Subject: [AI] Whither Justice? By Anand Teltumbde
From: avinash shahi <shahi88avin...@gmail.com>
Date: 05/06/2015 5:22 PM

Justice is a far cry today. The judicial process has been hijacked by
the wealthy and the powerful. Witness the course of Salman Khan's "hit
and run case," or the net result of J Jayalalithaa's "disproportionate
assets case," or, in sharp contrast, the situation of a
wheelchair-bound professor who took up the cudgels on behalf of the
oppressed, confi ned to an anda cell in Nagpur Jail, unable to get
bail.
http://www.epw.in/margin-speak/whither-justice.html
Anand Teltumbde (tanand...@gmail.com) is a writer and activist with
the Committee for the Protection of Democratic Rights, Maharashtra.

This court has become a safe haven for big criminals.

— The Supreme Court bench of
Justice B S Chauhan and Justice S A Bobde1

The Preamble of the Constitution of India, containing among other
things “justice, social, economic and political”—surely the most
important assurance to common people—paradoxically, is getting
distanced at an accelerated pace as we traverse the “developmental”
avenue. This first page of the Constitution has become a bitter satire
on the Indian people, and Part IV of it, “the directive principles of
state policy,” that further emphasise how the rulers should rule this
country, a dead document except for its provision for “the holy cow.”
The majority, the poor, constitutionally the owners of this country,
crave for justice while the rich commit crime and roam scot-free as
VVIPs. The entire judicial process stands hijacked by the moneybags as
admitted by the highest court of the land:

We are sorry to say that the court’s time is being used by senior
advocates and big criminals....We can say on oath that only 5% of the
time is being used for common citizens, whose appeals are waiting for
20 or 30 years.2

Unfortunately, the hijacking is not confined to time alone; it goes
far deeper into judicial prejudice against the poor and the oppressed
that need justice the most. While this leg (the judiciary) of the
state may be said to have performed better than the other two, the
legislature and the executive, or rather appears so because the people
helplessly rely upon it, justice surely has been the casualty. This
can be glaringly seen in the cases of Dalits, Adivasis and religious
minorities, resulting in a denial of justice, and in the cases of
politicians, big ticket criminals, corporate fraudsters, leading to,
from their point of view, fair play.

Two judgments, not unusual as such, but which came in quick succession
last month, namely, Salman Khan’s “hit and run case” illustrating the
plutocratic influence on justice and J Jayalalithaa’s
“disproportionate assets case” insinuating the influence of politics
on justice, delivered by two high courts in different states, surely
strengthen this dictum.

Salman versus Saibaba

“Bail is the rule, not an exception” is the guideline by the Supreme
Court in granting bail to undertrials. But how this precept gets
differentially applied by courts is widely known. The big-ticket
lawbreakers engage high-profile advocates who manage to get them bail
even before they are arrested or immediately thereafter, and then
stretch the period as long as possible, as in the case of
Salman. By the time a verdict is delivered, many of the witnesses
would be dead or made to die, and whatever incriminating evidence
existed is diluted or destroyed beyond retrieval. The least said about
the investigating agency, the police, in this context, the better.
Salman, the Dabang of Bollywood, while in a drunken state, drove his
Toyota Land Cruiser without licence into a group of people who were
sleeping on the pavement in the wee hours of 28 September 2002. One
person was killed and four others were seriously injured. He fled the
scene and was later arrested from a lawyer’s house. Though booked for
“culpable homicide not amounting to murder,” he got bail and lived as
a celebrity for the next 13 years. When eventually he was convicted
and awarded five years of imprisonment, within hours the Bombay High
Court, where ordinary mortals have to wait for years to see their case
on board, heard the plea of his lawyers and granted him bail with
supersonic speed. It is not the bail per se but the manner in which it
was granted reveals the attitude of the judiciary towards the rich,
and conversely, disdain for the poor.

Contrast this with the case of G N Saibaba, a wheelchair-bound
professor in a college of Delhi University with 90% physical
disability, who until a few years ago only crawled on his hands and
perhaps cannot even survive without assistance, is being denied bail
repeatedly despite public concern for his failing health. Years of
physical strain have taken a severe toll on his heart and lungs and
continue to damage his spinal system. In addition, the irregular and
inappropriate medication in jail, for which his lawyers had to
continually struggle, has reportedly damaged both his kidneys. Saibaba
never made any secret of his political views, and as the police
claims, may have even had contacts with Maoists, but by no stretch of
imagination could he commit any crime.

The Constitution guarantees freedom of faith and speech and the
Supreme Court explicitly averred that mere acquaintance with persons
of a banned organisation or just sympathy to the latter’s cause was no
crime. It was no crime even to be a member of a banned organisation
unless the person participated in the unlawful activities of the
organisation. The police have not provided even a shred of evidence
that Saibaba was involved in any unlawful activity of the Maoists.
What does it mean when such a person gets arrested under the draconian
Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and gets incarcerated in a
solitary anda cell of the notorious Nagpur Jail? What does it mean
when the judiciary, which routinely grants bail to Salman and his ilk,
but persistently denies it to Saibaba who takes up the cudgels on
behalf of the oppressed? Does the court think that the latter can flee
and escape trial if he is granted bail?

Amma’s Exoneration

On 11 May, the Karnataka High Court turned down the conviction of J
Jayalalithaa by the special court in the infamous “disproportionate
assets case” filed by Subramanian Swamy in June 1996. The trial went
on for 18 years and was transferred from Chennai to Bengaluru. The
special court pronounced the judgment on 27 September 2014, which
convicted her and three of her accomplices, namely, Sasikala Natrajan,
Ilavarasi and V N Sudhakaran, sentencing them to four years of simple
imprisonment. It also imposed a fine of Rs 100 crore on Jayalalithaa
and Rs 10 crore each on the others. This was Jayalalithaa’s third
conviction and the second instance of being forced to step down as
chief minister. All the four convicts were arrested and lodged in the
Parappana Agrahara Central Jail. Their bail application was rejected
by the Karnataka High Court but was subsequently accepted by the
Supreme Court granting them bail. The Karnataka High Court while
deciding on their appeal acquitted all of them of all the charges. Now
Jayalalithaa can formally take over the chief ministership of the
state.

The acquittal was reportedly based on a miscalculation of assets and
liabilities by the judge. If one just reads out the list of the assets
involved (farmhouses and bungalows in Chennai, agricultural land in
Tamil Nadu, a farmhouse in Hyderabad, a tea estate in the Nilgiris,
valuable jewellery, industrial sheds, cash deposits, investments in
banks, a set of luxury cars, 800 kg of silver, 28 kg of gold, 750
pairs of shoes, 10,500 sarees, 91 watches, and other valuables kept in
a vault of the Reserve Bank of India in Chennai) one can straightaway
say it was a case of corruption. But it took 18 years for the court to
say so and just a year for the higher court to reverse it.

The logic of the judgment is linked to the political need of the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Jayalalithaa, with 37 members of
Parliament in the Lok Sabha and 11 in the Rajya Sabha, is an
invaluable ally for the BJP, for which she needed to be exonerated of
the corruption charges first. When done, it was none other than
Narendra Modi who made one of the first congratulatory calls to her.
The BJP is desperate to overcome its weakness in the Rajya Sabha, as
seen in its attempts at wooing Mulayam Singh Yadav in Uttar Pradesh
and befriending Mamata Banerjee in West Bengal. In the given
circumstances, the judge could make some hodgepodge of a calculation
to de-stigmatise her, assuming that it would not be challenged.
Subramanian Swamy made it clear that he would not do it. Even if the
Congress government in the state does it, the case would take a long
time to conclude.

Indian democracy, we are tutored, stands on three equal and
independent legs—the legislature, the executive, and the
judiciary—which represent the constitutional mechanism of checks and
balances. This theoretical dictum of independence has been problematic
in theory itself because the government that is formed by the majority
legislative party represents a merger of the legislature and the
executive; it assumes the executive power and directly controls the
bureaucracy while continuing to exercise its legislative functions.
Over the years, in the political paradigm created by the
first-past-the-post type of electoral system, and a blurring of
substantive distinctions among parties, the bureaucracy learns to
carry the writ of the legislature (politicians). Stray episodes of the
Ashok Khemka type merely illustrate the dynamics. Whatever
independence existed was in the judiciary, which was the ultimate
custodian of the Constitution and the guarantor of the rule of law. It
could strike down executive or legislative action as ultra vires of
the Constitution. Notwithstanding the delays and occasional
controversies, the Indian people, by and large, relied on the judicial
system for justice.

The present Parliament has created the National Judicial Appointments
Commission (NJAC) by the Constitution (Ninety-Ninth Amendment) Act,
2014 which came into force on 13 April 2015. The NJAC replaced the
previous collegium system for appointment and transfer of judges.
While in theory, the NJAC appeared quite all right, it has actually
created an avenue for political meddling and potentially marred the
independence of judiciary. The NJAC has yet to make its appearance,
but its influence is being smelt through the judgments that appear to
benefit the political party at the helm.

Notes

1 Available at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/india
home/indianews/article-2449211/Top-judgesadmit-Indias-justice-tragedy-common-citizens-ignored-favour-high-profile-cases.html#
ixzz3ajoMZPpZ, accessed on 20 May 2015.

2 Ibid.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



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