Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Emergency: SC corrects itself after 3 decades:Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao

Emergency: SC corrects itself after 3 decades
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
The Hans India (25th June 2015)

http://www.thehansindia.com/posts/index/2015-06-25/Emergency-SC-corrects-itself-after-3-decades-159286

BJP’s all time great and popular leader LK Advani, is of the opinion that India’s political system is still to come to terms with the Emergency and a similar suspension of civil liberties could not be ruled out in the future. He further said that in the years since the Emergency in 1975-77, anything has not been done that gives an assurance that civil liberties will not be suspended or destroyed again.

A similar opinion was expressed by the Supreme Court of India in January 2011 wherein it has admitted that the Apex Court’s decision during the Emergency was erroneous and violated the Fundamental Rights of a large number of people in the country. The bench referred to the majority decision of the Constitution Bench of Supreme Court in 1976, which became infamous as the Habeas Corpus case, in which four judges went with the then Congress Government view that even right to life stood abrogated during Emergency.

The bench also pointed out that it was Justice Khanna who rightly gave a dissenting judgment by holding that issue of writs of Habeas Corpus by High Courts is an integral part of the Constitution and no power has been conferred upon any authority in the Constitution for suspending the power of the High Court to issue writs in the nature of habeas corpus during the period of emergency.

The Supreme Court of India, the highest judicial body established by the Constitution is the guardian of the Constitution and the highest court of appeal. However during the 1975-1977 Indian Emergency the constitutional rights of imprisoned persons were restricted under Preventive detention laws. In a Habeas Corpus case a bench of five senior most judges of Supreme Court-Justices A.N. Ray, P. N. Bhagwati, Y. V. Chandrachud, and M.H. Beg-ruled in favour of state's right for unrestricted powers of detention during emergency, while the only dissenting opinion was from Justice H. R. Khanna.

Justice Khanna said, detention without trial is an anathema to all those who love personal liberty... A dissent is an appeal to the brooding spirit of the law, to the intelligence of a future day, when a later decision may be possible to correct the error into which the dissenting Judge believes the court to have been betrayed. This dissent opinion did cost him the Chief Justice-ship of India. Justice Khanna remains a legendary figure among the legal fraternity in India for this decision. In fact, the dissent of Justice Khanna became the law of the land when, by virtue of the 44th Constitutional Amendment, Articles 20 and 21 (personal liberty) were excluded from the purview of suspension during Emergency.

The background of this was that, on June 25, 1975, the President declared that a grave emergency exists whereby the security of India is threatened by internal disturbances. The President also declared that the right of any person to move any court for the enforcement of the rights conferred by the Constitution shall remain suspended for the period during which the proclamation of emergency made on June 25, 1975.

Petitions came up for hearing, by the issuance of a writ of habeas Corpus, claiming that the petitioners have been deprived of their personal liberty in violation of the procedure established by law, which plea was available to them under the Constitution, in view of the Presidential order dated June 27, 1975, suspending the right to move for enforcement of the right conferred by the Constitution. High Courts took different views. The matter was brought before the Apex Court.

The Supreme Court majority order said that, in view of the Presidential order no person has any locus stand to move any writ petition before a High Court for habeas corpus or any other writ or order or direction to challenge the legality of an order of detention on the ground that the order is not under or in compliance with the Act or is illegal or is vitiated by malafides factual or legal or is based on extraneous consideration. Maintenance of Internal Security Act is constitutionally valid.

After three and half decades the Supreme Court admitted that the same Apex Court violated Fundamental Rights of a large number of people by endorsing Emergency during Indira Gandhi regime.

Fundamental Rights is a charter of rights contained in the Constitution of India. It guarantees civil liberties such that all Indians can lead their lives in peace and harmony as citizens of India. These include individual rights common to most liberal democracies, such as equality before law, freedom of speech and expression, freedom of association and peaceful assembly, freedom to practice religion, and the right to constitutional remedies for the protection of civil rights by means of writs such as Habeas Corpus. The Fundamental Rights are defined as basic human freedoms which every Indian citizen has the right to enjoy for a proper and harmonious development of personality. The development of constitutionally guaranteed fundamental human rights in India was inspired by historical examples such as England's Bill of Rights, the United States Bill of Rights and France's Declaration of the Rights of Man.

Let us hope that such dark days of Emergency never to be repeated again! Let us also hope that Governmental and non-Governmental Human Rights’ bodies are alert all the time to safe-guard the rights of citizens. Let us also hope that Advani’s fears will not become true. (End)


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