Friday, 25 June 2021

IT'S TIME TO BE OUTRAGED , MY LORDS.

   The Supreme Court has disappointed again. While not interfering with the bail granted to the three student activists- Natasha, Kalita and Asif- in the Delhi riots and " conspiracy " case, it has, vide its order of 18th June 2021, effectively stayed the Delhi High Court order on UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act). To my mind, the court had no option but to confirm the bail for to do otherwise would have been to legitimise the lawlessness of the state and to throw all legal principles to the winds. But it has undone this good work by once again adopting a balancing act  (becoming all too familiar now) to keep the executive in good humour, by decreeing that the Delhi High court decision of 15th June 2021 cannot be quoted as a precedent for other UAPA cases. This is as perplexing as it is unfortunate.

  The court has given no reason for the virtual stay, other than to express " surprise" that the bail order is of one hundred pages, and that it has " pan- India" implications. The surprise we can live with ( nothing surprises us any more) but the pan- India part is more difficult to swallow. And this is the reason: UAPA is a pan- India legislation so obviously any judgment on it will have pan-India implications too. Which is a very good thing: for far too long have our courts avoided questioning the draconian and unconstitutional provisions of this law. If one High Court has finally done so, its judicial impact SHOULD be felt all over the country. Why is the apex court so uncomfortable with this ?

The Supreme Court's order is also self contradictory. By confirming bail to the three accused it implicitly accepted the rational and reasoning of the Delhi High court order which resulted in the decision to grant them bail. But by " staying" the order and deciding to " examine" its correctness it seems to be suggesting that it is not sure of its legality! This is a legally untenable position, shows a certain waffling on the part of the Hon'ble judges, and perhaps a desire to accommodate the sudden panic in the Home Ministry and Delhi police.

  Legal luminaries can argue about all this till Mr. Adityanath's cows come home; I am no luminary, not even a 9 watt LCD bulb. But I do know a few adages, one of them being: War is too important to be left to generals. Similarly, I would venture to postulate that Justice is too important to be left to lawyers and judges. For these worthies are the bone crunchers, endlessly chewing on lifeless words, phrases, rulings, ratio decindi and what not. In the process they forget about the flesh and blood of human reality, of the lives being tortured by their unending, academic and arcane arguments. They forget that at the end of the day law and justice is nothing but common sense, and that it is high time they extricated themselves from the thicket of legalese they have lost themselves in, back to the straight, wide path of common law and common sense. As the eminent British jurist and writer John Mortimer said: " No brilliance is needed in the law, nothing but common sense and relatively clean finger nails."

  And it is nothing but common sense which the Delhi High Court has displayed in its order, clothed in unassailable legal principles. It is common sense to demand prima facie evidence of wrong doing before locking up someone for years without trial. It is common sense to distinguish between a common crime and terrorism. It is common sense to insist that dissent is not sedition. It is common sense to rule that if an accused cannot be granted a speedy trial then he is entitled to bail, as Justice ( Retd) Deepak Gupta pointed out in an interview the other day. It is common sense to declare that the Advisory Board of UAPA cannot be the final word or arbiter of a person's guilt and that the courts are entitled - nay, duty bound- to look into its decisions. It is common sense to pronounce that inferences and speculation cannot take the place of hard evidence and proof. What is there to " examine" in these self-evident truths, as the Supreme Court proposes to do?

  No matter how you look at the Delhi High Court order- from a layman's or a legal eagle's perspective- it fully meets the requirements of both the law and of common sense. The principles and law enunciated by it require no further " examination ", which is why the Supreme Court's freezing of it boggles the mind. It is high time time our judges took their noses out of their legal tomes and felt the pulse of the people. They should not have an exaggerated sense of their infallibility, should not confuse real justice with their love for didactics , should understand the unending trauma of the public. The judiciary would do well to remember that all great legal and social reforms have been driven by the people, not by the courts or governments- the suffragette movement for voting rights for women, the anti- slavery campaign, the right to abortion, the acceptance of gay rights, the abolition of apartheid, the right to privacy. Law and justice follow in the wake of what is right, not the other way around.                                                                                                         And every time our apex court has been insensitive to such deep feelings of the populace it has had to eat its own words and revise its orders very soon. Just in the recent past it has had to quash the infamous ADM Jabalpur order; it had initially set aside the brilliant Delhi High court decision of 2013 on decriminalisation of gay sex but had to revise its position in 2018; in 1962 it had ruled that privacy is not a fundamental right but has since upheld it in a number of judgments; in 1985 it had held that adultery was a crime but just last year it held otherwise. I have no doubt at all that in this case also, the Supreme Court will have to ultimately lift the stay: as they say, history doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes.

  A sensitive and responsive judiciary should anticipate, and be one step ahead of,  social and legal changes and reforms; it should not be merely reactive; it should not live in awe of the executive. This is especially true of the India of today where judges need to step out of their book- lined studies and sterile chambers and smell the stench of repression in the streets, see the accumulating debris of a collapsing criminal justice system., the 45 million pending cases, the indiscriminate use of UAPA and sedition laws, the 2% conviction rate in UAPA, the 500,000 incarcerated prisoners of whom 70% are undertrials, the increasing number of people acquitted after years in jail without bail ( Ilyas and Irfan in Maharashtra have just been found not guilty after spending nine years in jail under terrorism charge, 115 persons have been granted bail in Karnataka, Akhil Gogoi , an MLA in Assam has been acquitted just this week in one of the two UAPA cases lodged against him ). The increasing number of acquittals/ bails in UAPA demonstrate vociferously the illegal manner in which such cases are fabricated simply to incarcerate those activists whom the government finds inconvenient. The Delhi High court order goes a long way to stem this rot, and by staying it the apex court has undermined not only the sanctity of the High Court but also the expectations of the citizens. All without citing any cogent reason for doing so.

  I sometimes wonder: what will it take for our superior courts to grasp the fact that, in their obsession with technicalities and legalese, they are smothering the real spirit and essence of justice- common sense and compassion ? Is it that they feel that they themselves are immune from the state sponsored savagery being inflicted on the common public outside their sanitised ivory towers ? Was Benjamin Franklin right, after all, when he said: " Justice will not be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are ?"

  It's time to be outraged, my lords.

    

16 comments:

  1. Brilliant! Brilliant! Brilliant!

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  2. Justice is too important to be left to lawyers and judges?

    Avay Shukla, taking inspiration from Clemenceau’s famous saying, declares: “Justice is too important to be left to lawyers and judges.” How amateurish is his opinion!

    Clemenceau, the future French Prime Minister, had famously said the above quote on learning of yet another bloody and futile offensive on the Western Front. He had acted on his theory: After becoming premier in 1917 at age seventy-six, he visited the front lines one day a week for the rest of the war. He had dismissed many generals, made sure others obeyed orders to prepare defenses in depth, and carefully balanced the demands of the military commanders and coalition allies.

    David Ben Gurion, the founder of Israel, had little military experience in 1947. He interviewed all the Jewish military leaders, and then, chose his generals carefully. He drove and inspired his subordinates to do things which left to themselves they might not have done.

    Churchill’s strategic judgments were initially thwarted by the professional army generals, but later he did not allow that to repeat in the Second World War.

    War statesmen never treated the military as a specialised wing, that does not need interference from the Government leaders. They always took active part in strategising military options with the generals, sometimes overriding their views. When it comes to the judiciary, the same logic cannot be applied. It would be disastrous if the political executive dictates the judiciary how to decide cases.

    Avay Shukla has not gone through the media reports why the Supreme Court expressed surprise that the High Court has written over 100 pages judgement while granting bail to the accused. It is a consistent practice of the High Courts not to get into the merits of the cases in detail while giving interim relief in proceedings before subordinate courts, lest these influence the final judgements of those courts.

    In the order, Delhi High Court has held that any crime that is covered by IPC cannot be dealt with under UAPA, blurring the distinction between the two. Such finding would have repercussion in many cases pending all over India, though the facts in those cases may not be similar to the ones before the High Court. For this reason, the Supreme Court has directed that the Delhi High Court’s ruling shall not be followed as a precedent, even while declining to stay the bail granted to the accused by the High Court. It will give a comprehensive ruling on this issue.

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  3. When, Mr Sahu? The challenge to the constitutionality of UAPA has been pending for years. As have those relating to Electoral bonds, abrogation of Article 370, Reorganisation of Kashmir Act, CAA and many others. Please excuse me if I do not exhibit the same touching faith in the SC that you do.
    And by the way, hope your wide grasp of legal matters has acquainted you with the fact that under UAPA bail cannot be granted if a prima facie case exists against the accused. And how do you determine this without examining at least the basic evidence which the police have shown? The Delhi HC did exactly this and concluded that THERE WAS NO EVIDENCE. Yes, it took 100 pages to do so, but thats not surprising if the charge sheet runs into 19000 pages.
    You only confirm the point of my blog- an ounce of common sense is worth a pound of specious legalese.

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    Replies
    1. Excellent article and a wonderful reply!
      More power to your pen and your elbow, Mr Shukla.

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    2. Wonderful article and a brilliant reposte! More power to your pen, computer, elbow Mr Shukla, and thanks for saying what many of us feel.

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    3. Agree with you, very telling that the judges are above the law and have the same impunity that the state and the police have, and as sai nath said, the process us the punishment, so let tears go by, who cares for the suffering if the innocent. Why don't courts make police culpable, and pay compensation then perhaps they will stop making fraudulent charges to lock up people who care about the law and the constitution.

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    4. The day courts start taking cognisance of wrong arrests and confinements and start punishing law enforcement agencies like police, CBI, ED and others a strong msg will go not to indulge in such acts.
      At the same time Courts must not give Stay unnecessarily. Stay granted should be for a specific period say 30 to 45 days and should lapse automatically after that period. The aggrieved party should ensure adequate need or evidence to argue their case with in the Stay period.
      As of now it unduly delays the whole judicial process.
      Time is ripe to categorise the pending cases into few and give judgement in general so that all effected cases are settled in one go. Computers can play a unique roll in helping this. And all learned judges must benefit from the power of computer.
      This is the only way beside sincerity to close outstanding cases within a period of 2/3 years.

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    5. Excellent article My mutr question is that this UAPA legislation is draconian and being misused to throttle dissent Delhi High Court needs to be lauded for its judgement. Our highest court has only temporary tried to water down the effect of Delhi HC just to give a reprieve to the Government.
      I am surprised how the students from our premier Universities are being labelled as terrorist just because of their views against Government policies. India under this regime is being made into a Police State.

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  4. Mr. Sahu states that the author has not gone through media reports on the case. One of the comments of the Hon'ble Bench reported in the press was that "provisions of UAPA have been examined by the High Court even when the provisions were not challenged by the petitioners." Its SURPRISING (to use the words of the bench) for the SC to have thus commented. The High Court has nowhere struck down any provision of UAPA, but has only discussed its scope of applicability. Does this require a specific challenge to the Act in pleadings...?

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  5. Mr. Avay sukhla , I am a lawyer from chennai. Excellent article and intrepid cirtics about the Judgement of Supreme Court. I myself felt agonised by the recent decisions of Supreme Court and High courts regarding democratic aspects.(Levying heavy fines and enquiring about the Local standi in PILs). I wondered why the courts cant be straight in opining and whom they want to appease.As the couts are strongest pillars in our constitution amongst the rest ther verdicts should reflect the voice of the people instead of taking a balanced stands.

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  6. Highly articulately written article !!

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  7. Thought provoking!!as a lawyer I agree on one thing. Why jail people for so long when bail is the rule and bail is the exception. Mr. Sahu let's meet and talk. My website is www.vandanashah.com

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  8. Avay is very correct when he says that the judiciary is too important to be left to lawyers and judges. Even judges of the HCs promoted from the career judiciary seem to be more in tune with reality.
    Arvind Kaul

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  9. S Vijay Kumar: well argued and cogent. Perhaps if the High Court had written a smaller critique on the UAPA legislation part , the Supreme Court may not have had occasion to make an issue of it .I think this was possible and in fact sometines judgements of the superior courts are couched in pompous language and unnecessarily lengthy But it should not prejudice a proper appreciation of what was said by the High Court.
    May be the Supreme Court should also introspect. there are are many important cases including PILs where the public has been waiting for the many hundred pages of pearls of wisdom from the Supreme Court on important national issues. We hope these cases are now not pending merely to reduce the length of the judgements to the Supreme Courts satisfaction.

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  10. Isn't it outrageously criminal to not diligently examine evidence cited to slap laws like the UAPA, Sedition? And later when those charged are let off for want of credible evidence, but after having spent years in prison? Do not our Courts think (I would have liked to use FEEL) that such wrongly confined victims should be very, very handsomely compensated by the State / MHA, although a price cannot be put on a wrongly imprisoned period in one's life! What Justice are we talking about?

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  11. Avay, you have been extensively quoted by the Times Top Ten e paper. Cogent is right.

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