Just in:
e& UAE Unveils Strategic Roadmap // Galaxy Macau’s Sakura Cultural Festival Kicked off in Splendor // Moomoo Wins “Digital CX Awards 2024” by The Digital Banker // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // TPBank and Backbase Clinch ‘Best Omni-Channel Digital CX Solution’ at the Digital CX Awards 2024 // Downpours in Oman and UAE Likely Amplified by Warming Planet // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Fri, 26 Apr 2024 // GE Jun, Chairman and CEO of TOJOY, Delivers an Inspiring Speech: “Leaping Ahead Again” // Liverpool FC continues international growth with first official retail partnership in South Korea // Oman Seeks Growth Through Strategic Economic Alliances // World Football Federation Secures Sponsorship From Saudi Oil Giant // UN Commends Vietnam’s Progress on Climate Goals // Forward Fashion’s Artelli Presents: Nobuyoshi Araki’s “Paradise” Starting from April 27th, at K11 MUSEA // World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // ByteDance Eyes US Shutdown for TikTok // Supreme Court dismisses pleas for 100% VVPAT verification // CapBridge Shares Insights on the Recent Launch of Digital Asset ETFs in Hong Kong // Emirates to Embrace Electric Seaglider Travel // Why Lok Sabha Election For 20 Seats In Kerala Is Crucial For Future Of Left In Indian Politics? // AVPN Charts Path Forward at 2024 Global Conference //

Controversial Remarks Not Part Of Vacation Bench’s Order

By K Raveendran

It is all very well that the petition moved by former BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma for combining all the FIRs registered against her in different parts of the country for her offending remarks about Prophet Mohammed has been dismissed by a Supreme Court vacation bench in a two-line order.

It goes a long way to protect the credibility of the highest court of the land that some of the highly emotional remarks made by the judges during the hearing of the petition are not part of the final order.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to the established law, delivered in a judgment by a regular bench of the Supreme Court, comprising Justices D Y Chandrachud and M R Shah, the remarks made by judges are not part of the judicial record and therefore do not matter.

In fact, Justice Chandrachud’s bench had expressed strongly against remarks made by judges during hearing being taken as the final word. The bench went to the extent of saying that judicial accountability is lost where oral regimes prevail and emphasised that the judges should speak through their judgments and orders and not through oral directions. ‘The written order is what is binding and enforceable’.

The bench issued the important ruling in a petition by the Election Commission challenging a remark made by the Madras High Court that a case of murder must be registered against the commission for causing covid to surge by allowing elections to take place in four states and one union territory.

While there is no doubt that the remarks made by Nupur Sharma in a television channel debate about Gyanvapi mosque were by all means revolting to the nation’s collective conscience, some of the oral remarks made by the vacation bench, comprising Justices Surya Kant and JB Pardiwala, appeared to have strayed from the line of judicial accountability into highly subjective emotional responses.

Already, demands have surfaced for the withdrawal of some of the observations, which media units all over the country have celebrated with gay abandon, bringing serious setback to the Indian government’s bid to calm nerves of important partners in the Arab Muslim world over the highly damaging remarks made by the now sacked BJP spokesperson. Chief Justice N V Ramana has been approached for the withdrawal of ‘uncalled for’ remarks by the vacation bench. A letter to this effect went to the extent of alleging that the judges’ remarks linking Sharma’s comment with the beheading of Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur justified the brutal act and amounted to giving clean chit to the killers.

ADVERTISEMENT

The judges seemed to have been carried away by the protests against Nupur Sharma’s remarks to the extent of refusing to apply uniform standards to her petition, in the process straying into areas that were not related even remotely. When it was pointed out on behalf of the former BJP leader, facing national and international wrath, that there is precedent of FIRs being combined as had happened in the case of Republic Arnab Goswami, since she is fearing physical danger to herself, the judges said Arnab Goswami was a journalist and such privileges are not available to a party spokesperson. The vacation bench judges seemed to have overlooked to the fact that the laws applicable to a journalist are the same as those that may be applied to any other citizen.

Even more objectionable was the questioning by the judges of Nupur Sharma’s alleged ‘arrogance’ in approaching the Supreme Court directly rather than going to a magistrate. A court has to go by the law of the land and decide the matter before it accordingly. If the petition is fit to be allowed, it should be allowed and if it deserved to be rejected it should be done so on the basis of the applicable law and there is no need to go into the state of mind of the petitioner, except when that particular state of mind itself is the main consideration. The judges clearly exceeded their brief in this.

The bench questioning television debates on issues that are sub-judice is also out of sync with the reality in which every second issue in public life is these days pending consideration of one court or the other. Going by the vacation bench’s logic, the current developments Maharashtra should be a strictly no-go for the media as the Shiv Sena rebel MLAs’ case is before the Supreme Court and promises to be there for some more time. Surely, it does not build up a case for journalists to go on vacation! (IPA Service)

The post Controversial Remarks Not Part Of Vacation Bench’s Order first appeared on IPA Newspack.

IPA News

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Just in:
AVPN Charts Path Forward at 2024 Global Conference // CapBridge Shares Insights on the Recent Launch of Digital Asset ETFs in Hong Kong // Ministry of Agriculture Supports Taiwanese Tea’s Entry into Singapore Market to Boost Global Presence // World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // Forward Fashion’s Artelli Presents: Nobuyoshi Araki’s “Paradise” Starting from April 27th, at K11 MUSEA // e& UAE Unveils Strategic Roadmap // ByteDance Eyes US Shutdown for TikTok // Abu Dhabi Secures US$5 Billion in Fresh Funding // Prince Holding Group’s Chen Zhi Scholarship Clinches Silver Stevie for CSR Excellence at Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards // Liverpool FC continues international growth with first official retail partnership in South Korea // Supreme Court dismisses pleas for 100% VVPAT verification // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Fri, 26 Apr 2024 // Etihad Airways Announces Paris Service with A380 // TPBank and Backbase Clinch ‘Best Omni-Channel Digital CX Solution’ at the Digital CX Awards 2024 // Oman Seeks Growth Through Strategic Economic Alliances // Crypto Market Poised for Boom as Baby Boomers Embrace Bitcoin ETFs // World Football Federation Secures Sponsorship From Saudi Oil Giant // DIFC Courts Cement Role as Top English Dispute Resolution Choice // Emirates to Embrace Electric Seaglider Travel // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology //