These days Mr. D.Y. Chandrachud, Chief Justice of India, is talking of, and worrying about, the legacy he will leave behind when he retires from the job next month. And well he might. He was elevated to this position at perhaps the most critical juncture in the nation's recent history, when every democratic and humanist principle was being crushed under an unstoppable electoral machine and a government on steroids. When his last four predecessors had let down the country and had walked away into an inglorious sunset with their sinecures and post retiral benefits. Never before had the nation nurtured such high expectations and vested so much hope in an heir apparent to the Chief Justice's chair. The legacy of Mr. Chandrachud will be that he too let the nation down.
Honesty, said Shakespeare, is the best legacy; sadly, his Lordship has been less than honest, with us, and to himself. At seminars, key-note speeches, valedictory functions, convocations- even in his obiter dicta- he has always hit the right notes: stressing on individual liberty, freedom of speech, religious pluralism, constitutional safeguards, the responsibilities of the court to hold the executive accountable. But within the sanitised confines of his courtroom he seemed to lack the courage of his convictions, leading many to wonder whether he had any convictions at all. In the words of Alexander Pope: he was willing to wound but afraid to strike. That is not the proper foundation for a judge's legacy.
The Supreme Court's records will speak for themselves in times to come. Justice Chandrachud had many opportunities to do the right thing, to restore the autonomy of institutions (appointment of Election Commissioners), to reign in rampaging state governments (the bulldozers of U.P., Nuh and Uttarakhand), to prevent the illegal surveillance of citizens (the Pegasus "inquiry" where the Union govt. dared to tell him that it would not cooperate!), the restoration of statehood (in Jammu and Kashmir), to restore legitimately elected governments brought down by totally illegal means (Maharashtra), to restore faith and credibility in the electoral process (the repeated petitions to return to paper ballots or do a hundred percent verification and matching of VVPATS), to question an unaccountable Election Commission on its dubious actions and decisions ( delay in uploading voter counts, non-issue of Forms 17C, mismatch in the votes cast and votes counted, failure to take action under the Model Code of Conduct against high functionaries of the government). Perhaps the worst of all was that, under his Lordship's watch, thousands of social activists, journalists. dissenters, academics continue to languish in jails without a trial or even bail. Omar Khalid's bail petitions have been adjourned, I believe, 14 times with a succession of judges recusing themselves without any explanation. The Koregaon accused are being released on bail in instalments, as if justice is a divisible commodity. Some of them have even died under these conditions (the 80 year old Stan Swami), or as a result of the inhuman treatment meted out to them while in custody, the most recent being Prof G.N. Saibaba, a man with 90% disability who was kept in jail for almost a decade without being convicted of any offence. And the most outrageous of all these stains on the court is that, when he was acquitted by the Bombay High Court, the Supreme Court took the unprecedented action of convening the very next day on a holiday, and stayed the High Court order! And which historian can ever forget the Ram Janam Bhoomi order, in which faith of the majority community, not legal evidence, was made the basis of a judgment that should shame any country or its judiciary? Or the photo of the Hon'ble judges celebrating the judgment with a dinner and wine at a five star hotel, a judgment which (as per press reports at the time) none of them signed- another first in our sorry history.
Under Justice Chandrachud's watch the Center was allowed to defenestrate the Collegium even further, with its tactics of delays, pick and choose, or simply sitting on the recommendations: he did make some noises initially, but then adopted a strategic silence. The same fate has met the dozens of habeas corpus petitions now interred in the registry of the court. The SEBI (Hindenberg) and Pegasus inquiries were never followed up to their logical conclusion, and the can of worms opened up with the Electoral bonds judgment was hastily shut again, an enforced closure of what had begun to look very much like a sovereign extortion racket.
For all his high oratory about the majesty of the court and accountability of the executive, not a single govt functionary has actually been punished, to the best of my knowledge, not even the Returning Officer of the Chandigarh mayoral election who was caught red handed in an electoral "flagrante delicto" in an official video. Not the encounter specialists, the bulldozer bureaucrats, or the regulatory agencies, even when the Court held the arrests to be illegal both procedurally and on merits. It is true that Mr. Chandrachud himself was not directly responsible for all these commissions and omissions, dictated by other benches, but as the Chief Justice of the court he has to share the blame. He is, after all, the head of the institution, its chief administrator, the primus inter pares, and most important, the Master of the Roster. If you take credit for the thunder you must take the blame for the drought.
He watched in silence the creeping politicisation of some of the High Courts, their judges openly expressing allegiance to religions, the religious biases in their judgments, judges joining political parties and even standing for elections immediately after retiring, retired judges attending religious conclaves. The issue here is not about the legality of these predilections but about the spirit of the constitutional values they are supposed to uphold. As Justice Chandrachud himself was wont to remind us often, the spirit of a law is just as important as its letter. And therefore it was important for him to have spoken out loud and clear, to remind his brother judges of the inappropriateness of their behaviour, of the judiciary's own Restatement of Values of Judicial Life, which the Supreme Court had issued in 1997. The Chief Justice of India occupies a position on the country's moral pedestal much higher than his position on the Warrant of Precedence- his every word carries weight and has the capacity to influence the nation's discourse. Given his fondness for preaching from the pulpit, it was incumbent upon him to have reiterated the moral and ethical red lines for the conduct of judges. By not doing so, he has, by default, become a party to the judiciary's decline during his tenure.
To be fair, he has passed some praise-worthy judgments, as on decriminalising homosexuality, rights of transgenders etc. But the true test of a superior judge lies in his ability to stand up to the executive, and in this respect his judgments have been few and far between; in fact, it requires an effort to recall them. Far too much time was spent in grandstanding, wasting the court's time on issues it had no business getting into- the farmers' protest and the RG Kar Medical College cases are just two instances where he seemed to be playing to the gallery. Both cases have diminished the court's image- the farmers refused to heed its suggestions in the first one, and the doctors summarily rejected the orders to return to work. Perhaps someone should have reminded the Chief Justice of the first law of public administration- do not seek to expand your area of concern beyond your area of influence.
And even while he is on his way out, Justice Chandrachud will not give up his penchant for empty symbolism: just this week he has inaugurated his version of the statue of Justice, he calls it Lady Justice. The lady now does not have any blindfolds ( "justice is not blind"), and instead of a sword she now holds a copy of the Indian Constitution. I for one am unmoved by these histrionics, for to me the three monkeys of the Mahatma are today more reflective of the state of our justice system- blind, deaf and speechless.
One does not write this piece with any joy, but with a deep sense of regret at what could have been. Here was a man, a judge, who is a scholar, a decent human being, a compassionate individual, a penetrative legal acumen who could have done much to bring the country out of the morass it is being shoved into. The tragedy is not that he failed to do so, but that he chose not to. If only he had learnt from the words of that exemplar of virtuous service whose legacy will live on for generations, Mother Teresa:
The world is changed by your example, not your opinions.
Farewell, your Lordship; we wish you well, notwithstanding your betrayal of the nation.
I entirely agree with the appraisal of Mr Chandrachud, the retiring CJI. He had a brilliant opportunity that he unfortunately squandered in empty rhetoric, playing to the galleries and then quietly surrendering to the will of the executive.
ReplyDeleteI suppose some part of the soul has to be sold to the devil to become what one becomes... I guess it is naive of us mango people to expect that people in high places are there on the strength of merit alone. If it was really merit that counted in selection, we wouldn't have the scams galore that we do have.
ReplyDeleteThat's a succinct and well presented perspective you've added to the discourse. The current Chief Justice has probably overtraded his hand in the Faustian bargain...he dejects more than he delights. On merit though, he was probably the best and soundest person to have taken the coveted chair.
DeleteAs usual a frank and correct appraisal. You deserve appreciation for your forthright views. Great contribution.
ReplyDeleteSo right you are, very very disappointed with him...he let the country down.
ReplyDeleteSo well analysed and written, you have not left any part of his tenure without assessment as is required to a critical analysis.
ReplyDeleteVery good analysis, Mr. Shukla.
ReplyDeleteAs the saying goes, barking dogs seldom bite, DYC has given a live demonstration of his inner weaknesses.
I had mentioned after his judgement on electoral bonds that if he failed to ensure recovery of funds collected/extorted through the illegal scheme and get it in to the Government treasury, he will be seen standing in the queue of his predecessors.
The blunder of CJI's error of judgment on being seen with Modi, at the Ganesh Pooja should also have been mentioned.
The High Levels of Expectations that the Population of India had when DYC was Sworn in as CJI, soon Evaporated when as Shukla Ji has analysed, One by One all his True Colours were out in the open.
DeleteDYC’s Betrayal of the People of India was the Most Unkindest Cut of all!
Despite the blindfolds being removed from the new justice statue willful blindness at the highest judicial level has multiple and manifold inter-generational ramifications... This lost opportunity could have changed the course of our collective future...history will bear testimony someday!
ReplyDeleteI see deep frustration in entire article, and most of the commentators are badly mentally sick, in between of article, I saw recent rubbish statements of congress "delay in uploading data 😃"
ReplyDeleteBias of the author is very much apparent. Many of judgements quoted are considered as let down just because it does not suit the authors ideology, even when judgments are by multi judge benches and based on sound legal position.
DeleteIn due course this article needs (should) be contrasted to the hollow praise that will issue from the Bar Council and others, when the present CJI retires!! Not just the government, we deserve the institutional heads we keep getting like benighted destiny!!
ReplyDeleteTotally agree with your analysis, as a victim of yes bank AT1 Bonds, we have witnessed the delay tactics from last 18 months, despite having favourable verdict from Mumbai, no date has been awarded by supreme court. Turely shameful.
ReplyDeleteA very objective analyses. As someone pointed out the Ganesh puja shocker should also have been mentioned. However, in the last 14 years he has been the best of the weak kneed, as you graciously summed up.
ReplyDeleteCome folks have suggested that I should also have referred to the Ganesh pooja episode in Chandrachud's house as one of his failings. I did consider that but decided against it as I did not wish to intrude into his personal life and home. That space should be sacrosanct.
ReplyDeleteIt should have been had the event been as such, but it became yet another " marketed event" of the PM, in which the CJI became an unwitting perpetrator. Simply said media should have been disbarred from that particular moment.
DeleteHats off to you. Free, fair and fearless appraisal of judicial working. The higher judiciary has developed a proactive of making oral observation against the system but these are seldom part of judgement. Lack of commitment to deliver on merits.
ReplyDeleteThe rot started with A N Ray. The "Wire" brand criticism should have started then. But it suited intellectuals till change of guard. No point of hue and cry for continuing rot. As We lack men of courage We suffered and continue to do so. Why expect great heros from a society of clay feet. Also courage does not mean supporting divisive subaltern and suppression of majority interest. It only allows the lumpen to rule. The intelligentsia of 1970s have to blame themselves first before showing fingers to Chandrachud.
ReplyDeleteSad but true. The CJI turned out to be a great disappointment.
ReplyDeleteI always liked what you write and follow you closely. But your piece on Chandrachud stands out in reasoning and depth. While his predecessors never made any attempts to be impartial, this CJ wore a mask. His speeches are the maximum distance between rhetoric and action any judge can have. History, hopefully, will forgive him and not forget him
ReplyDeleteI think it was Marx who said " History shows that any set of people get the Government they deserve". While I agree with your analysis, I feel too that our own silence is deafening. Very well written.
ReplyDeleteमै करना तो बहुत चाहता था, मेरे पास आइडिया बहुत थे, पर कर नहीं पाया, समय जब बीत गया तन ख्याल आया, अरे यह क्या हो गया
ReplyDeleteAfter Observing the manner in which almost all Government Officials behave at the Top of their Ladder (with the Sole Exception of Mr Sheshan, the EX EC of India) DYC’s Let Down is just one more for the History Books
ReplyDeleteMr. Shukla’s insightful dissection of the CJI’s tenure and the intellectual legacy he will leave when he demits office, is sharp. His reflections on the CJI’s legacy capture the collective disappointment many feel towards a man whose wisdom was seen as the beacon to restoring probity and democracy in the country.
ReplyDeleteHis analysis, though, appears to spare the CJI the questionable intersection of religious virtue and professional imperative. He skips to write how the CJI was blasé about sharing his personal religious ceremony at his official residence with the Prime Minister, the optics of which were troubling as well as concerning. Perhaps warranting presence in an essay so astutely constructed as this. When the CJI opts to subordinate the institutions of the Judiciary and Executive to his religious preferences and permits the airing of the event nationally, he collapses the sacrosanctity of personal space and privacy. Its inclusion in Mr. Shukla’s trademark vein would have rounded the discourse, one muses.
When I saw fourth & last books authored by Mr Shukla, I knew that the Ganesh puja aarti, which has been apparently deliberately omitted in the article, must have been the genesis for this biased appraisal. Very cleverly and carefully, the author has avoided using the same analytical skills in criticising certain anti-Government judgements passed by him. He is surely leaving behind a legacy which both the opposition and the Government are confused whether to praise or criticise.
ReplyDelete"Conscience doth make cowards of us all" but not really: only in those of us who can countenance the cowardice in our selves.
ReplyDeleteThe author has rightly exposed this person's glaring failures, but should have also identified two additional significant failings that will equally contribute to his tarnished legacy in India's legal history. His court was a mute witness to the rise of religious intolerance, a silent accomplice to hate speech. The Supreme Court, under his leadership, failed to act when extremist elements openly called for genocide and economic boycotts against religious minorities. The low-life godi media, with all its vilest owners, anchors, reporters, controlled by vested interests (cronies' owned), has been continuously filling the airwaves with blatantly bigoted, communal hate speeches, fuelling religious division, bigotry and fear in the society, and thereby totally sabotaging the constitutional order, rule of law. Yet, the court remained silent, allowing these anti-national, anti-constitution, country-breaking, communal forces to erode the nation's secular fabric. His refusal to act punitively and decisively, when it mattered most, emboldened extremists and eroded public faith in the judiciary. History will remember him as a monumental failure.
ReplyDeleteThe film Deevar, is famous for many scenes. But one scene, that may explain capitulation of most institutions, never quite got highlighted - one where the labour leader signs the agreement under a duress that the world is unable to see (the gun pointed at the temple of his near ones)
ReplyDelete🙏🙏
"seemed to lack the courage of his convictions, leaving many to wonder if he had any convictions at all" - sums it all; such a pity😏
ReplyDeleteSo much had been expected of this gentleman who, as you say, took on the reins at a very crucial juncture.
ReplyDeleteHe COULD have made ALL the difference.
Instead, he has let the nation down.
Too long a post to read it in entirety. However it is apparently clear that it is one sided and the author is anti BJP. According to the blogger he wanted the CJI to go hammer and tongs at the Modi government. Well that too is not the unbiased way a judiciary should work. The court pronounce judgements according to the facts as per law presented before it, not According to the whims and fancies of the presiding judge..This post serves the mental satisfaction of the author. Sleep well under the belief that you have done your duty of thrashing the Modi government.
ReplyDeleteThe Modi government has destroyed all major institutions including judiciary. The sangh parivar doesn't respect either the constitution or the religious morality. The ideology of hatred was allowed to grow in Chandrachud's tenure.
DeleteKPS Gill once famously said that if he did not act the way he fid, the writ of the SC would not have run beyond Palam. Best is the enemy of good.
ReplyDeleteIf the CJI has not reached heights desired by the author, he has ensured some landmark achievements that still retain relevance of SC.Anything more and the SC would have become irrelevant to the executive
I don't agree with Avay Shukla. CJI has done more good work. CJI's Legacy will always stay.
ReplyDeleteThe article is more biased. Amongst the debatable judgements the most unwise is the one related to the claim to return to Paper ballots or 100% vvpat. In such a massive exercise we have all witnessed the ills and inaccuracies and labourious paper ballets and various problems associated with the conducting voting , security of large ballot boxes sorting, counting and publishing after much delay. It is similar to calling upon to negate the digitisation benefits in financial system and revert back to manual accounting days.
ReplyDeleteThe article is biased and has hidden agenda of putting obstacles in the progress of anti Indian lobby. Everyone knew that the kisan Aandolan was funded by those so called khalistani leaders.Not a word about anything wrong done by those on the name of farmers.
ReplyDeleteAre you jurist? Are you a senior advocate of Supreme Court? Have you heard "Jurisprudence"? Are you psychologist?
ReplyDeleteTo write about, or analyse Supreme Court judgements, a reconditioned, you must have to be a jurist or a senior advocate of supreme Court. JURISPRUDENCE is not a fucking business for a duffur blogger.
A friend commented -
ReplyDelete"Not forgotten or forgiven!! - turned out to be totally two faced individual who excelled in false piety 😡"
Brilliant piece Avay. You hit the nail on the head. Tenure was a complete let down. CJI said the right things and a few politically correct postures but very little otherwise. They took up Jaggi vadudevs matter suo moto but not of fasting ladakhis in delhi not being allowed to protest at jantar mantar and cordoned off from other citizens. Our young students are in jail without bail. Shame! History will not be kind to him. What a disappointment!
ReplyDeleteA bitter disappointment
ReplyDeleteHad great expectations, considering his pedigree and the fact he had nothing to prove - Alas - his epitaph reads " I came, I saw and got conquered" or "I came from something- but resulted in nothing" best 'I could have done something, but I got more for doing nothing - so who am I? Just another pothole in the path of Glorious India"
ReplyDeleteHe wa,s sworn in as CJI when the entire Constitutional Institutions was crumbling. There were high hopes from him as he carried a Legacy of the former CJIs Son. His talks raised high hopes but when it came to dictation Judgements, his talks doesn't match the words. A big let down for a pillar of Democracy. When the History of the Modern India will be written, he will be looked down upon . The video footage of him with PM celebrating Ganesh puja sent the entire Nation in disbelief. A man who preaches high moral, ethical values to others was himself seen as disobeying the same.Righly ,he was worried about his legacy
ReplyDeleteActually, putting it mildly, the Hon'bl soon to be ex CJI, strongly believes in the dictum "more people are seeing in this world than weighing". And thus he increases the load of Hercules no end too, among many other loads!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSpot on! The compromises made on collegium recommendations (omission - Justice Kureshi, commission - a judge with a history of alleged hate speeches against minorities) stands out as a dark chapter in his tenure
ReplyDeleteI personally feel he has been a failure. I thought he is young and will be the pulse of the people I mean the litigants. In my country the litigants are at the mercy of lawyers who keep taking adjournments in connivance with the respective judges and the poor litigants are made to pay for every hearin even when the appointed lawyers fails to torn up for cases and he in turn requests his friend or colleagues to hold for him
ReplyDeleteWhat injustice for the poor gullible litigants and years and years of torture and feeding the advocates for only adjournments
I honestly believed that this young justice would bring some changes but he is busy inaugurating only high court and trial
Court buildings
Jyotish-Divine ( do you have a real name, or are you more comfortable cowering in the darkness of anonymity?), please go back to the sewer line you have emerged from. It's better to be silent and let everyone think you are stupid, than to open your mouth and confirm it. Law is too important to be left to judges and lawyers alone, just as war cannot be left to the generals alone. The public is the biggest stake-holder in how justice is dispensed, and has every right to, indeed MUST, express itself. If you are so incensed with my views why don't you give a point-by-point rebuttal instead of regurgitating the foul language you have no doubt been brought up on? Readers of this blog would prefer a rational discussion, not a venting of the spleen.
ReplyDeleteOne observes Mr. Shukla bears a striking semblance with the current Chief Justice in the manner they command their sanctums. Both are the unchallenged masters of their rosters and brook no rooster to crow out of turn, tone or tenor in their court! Whether an errant litigant, an impatient lawyer, or an unruly fortune-teller, all must decorously follow the custom of the court that is Their Lordship’s.
DeleteP. S. Does the CJI by a different facet, bear a semblance in character with the one and only of non biological descent? Both are overtly religious and indifferent to the intersecting of their professions and their faith. Both are enthusiastic about staying in the spotlights of attention and glory. Both are excellent orators, equal narrators and unstoppable at being the keynote speakers at events. More importantly, is there the streak of unbridled vanity unmissable from under the coat-tails of both? Finally, is the CJI preparing the grounds for an entry into Politics, something he appears not too distanced from... Food for thought.
Thank you Mr. Shukla. This makes for such depressing reading, but an accurate analysis of where our honourable, soon to retire, CJI is leaving us. The real implications of the crumbling of this institution in its inability to hold up the social, political and financial mores that hold up our constitution will be realised for their full implications perhaps a few years from now. Perhaps there is scope for correction. We must all hope that there is.
ReplyDeleteJURISPRUDENCE is not the business of a duffur blogger. Shukla ji umar ke saath ‘sathiya’ gaye hain , survives for cheap popularity on antisemitic blogs .. shud now take retirement & he knows well what happens to writers & bloggers when they attain ‘ vanaprasth’ as per his own blog , *quote* ‘Actually, Vanprastha is a pretty benign and benevolent concept if you consider what happens to the old critters in other parts of the world. In ancient Egypt they were shoved into hastily constructed pyramids with all their finery and walled up; in Japan they are left in abandoned villages to fend for themselves; in the USA the old fogeys are dispatched to dismal old age homes to watch TV and play canasta; in certain parts of Africa they are left in the bush to provide the main course for the hyenas' night out festivities. Vanprastha, by comparison, does none of this, it simply asks you to take a chill pill, step aside, divest yourself of all responsibilities and properties, and concentrate on moksha’ *Unquote* . Some people just thrive on negative vibes & and an all complaining nature , of which Shukla ji is one .. most of the issues highlighted in the article do not carry any weight but I do agree on one of his blog statements ‘ *There are two certain ways to lose a friend: one, have an affair with his wife; two, start a discussion on politics.*
ReplyDeleteWhy sully a well composed, cogent blog with irrational scribbles as this and the fortune-teller’s? You can both practice your invectives on your own blogs to perfection and address them to each other. Neither of you has commented on the content, yet taken offensive swipes at the writer that are personal, vituperative and utterly non contextual. That Mr. Shukla permits your distasteful and libelous ranting to occupy some bytes on his blog speaks of his courage and character. And contrastingly yours along with the fortune-teller’s also.
DeleteIt's an interesting article and every word is true here. I wished to see India flourishing in truth and honesty but unfortunately, falsehood has gained upper hand ably supported by judicial and other constitutional bodies. We need more people like Shukla ji, who can at least pinch the soul of those take oath on the constitution and recklessly defile the same in the bargain.
ReplyDeleteWhy waste good paper and ink, or shall I say time and effort over these shixxxx baxxxxxx. They are nothing more than ink blots on our horizon.
ReplyDeleteHis legacy would best be remembered as one that did not have the courage of his conviction to act like the SC Judges of Pakistan. They dared to take on the high and mighty and put them behind bars, whether it be the President, Prime Minister or any other authority. EVMs was a classic case to stop this menace of frauding the country by the ruling party. His legacy was that of a judge who would crawl when he was told to bend
ReplyDeleteThe end is not yet. Need to watch if he will be rewarded for his very sophisticated crafty ‘dance with the powers’ - after his retirement. He started well but he does not finish well. The graveyard of Indian judiciary has many tombstones which will read ‘guilty of compromise’ with the powerful with no conviction of character.
ReplyDelete# https://thewire.in/law/supreme-court-bhagwati-chandrachud-india
ReplyDeleteKeeping undertrials in prison for months and years together without granting them freedom on bail at least is an assault on right to life and personal liberty and even amounts to a crime against humanity. Read my editorial in LAW ANIMATED WORLD, 30 April 2024 (OL issue): https://media.licdn.com/dms/image/v2/D5622AQFUu-1D5Qj-ug/feedshare-shrink_800/feedshare-shrink_800/0/1727017546928?e=1732752000&v=beta&t=XJ0vtTBH1acQmpDKJBZ12UT3AD1XlIhGy-jmguBH18Y
ReplyDeletehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mallikarjuna-sharma-77645710/recent-activity/all/
ReplyDeleteIt isn't as though Narendra Modi - with his ubiquitous camera retinue tagging along - surprised Chandrachud by dropping by at his castle in Mumbai on Ganesh Chaturti without notice. The entire charade was obviously well planned and choreographed much in advance, all for strengthening the Vishwaguru's personality cult . It being so, his home became public domain, and no longer qualified as "sacrosanct space." You wouldn't have intruded on his privacy if you had exposed the distasteful spectacle.
ReplyDeleteVenit, vidit, reliquit! He could have done lot more than what he did. Yes, the Nation feels let down in more ways than one.
ReplyDeleteYou have covered the entire canvas, maybe a little subjective assessment.
ReplyDeleteEvery citizen has a right to demand and expect perfection but in his case, a few issues, which must be kept in mind, are; he atleast dared to take the first step, he worked in very hostile environment, he was clean and his intentions were certainly good.
Important to remember that CJI can't run the country. He can dictate a strong judgement, which is just a piece of paper, if not implemented. He probably learnt his lesson from Pegasus case.
Another important thing to remember is we don't know what kind of pressures and circumstances were behind each case. A simple example is Ganpati celebrations. If you get a call from PMO that PM wishes to join you, it is very difficult to say no. Who got the cameramen and the complete story will never be known.
One can be critical in evaluation but a few lines of the good things he has done, would have done justice.
Very objective . Some events in history will stay as legacy no matter how disgraceful they are
ReplyDeleteThanks for an objective analysis. My first doubts arose from his concurring Ayodhya judgement
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