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When one examines the hopes and fears that one has from judiciary,
it is necessary to define the role that one expects the
judiciary to play in the country. Apart from dispensing justice
in individual disputes brought before it, the judiciary is
expected to be the guardian of the Constitution and is supposed
to protect the fundamental rights of the people and implement
the rule of law. This in particular means that that the
judiciary is expected to protect the civil rights under Articles
14 (equality), 19 (speech, movement, profession etc.) and 21
(life and liberty), not just in the narrow literal sense, but
also in the liberal purposive sense in which the Supreme Court
itself has interpreted these rights. Thus, the Judiciary is
expected to protect the rights of the common people of the
country to a free and dignified life where every citizen is
guaranteed the means of securing the basic necessities of
leading a dignified life, such as food, clothing, housing,
healthcare and education etc. The judiciary is also expected to
ensure that the executive and the legislature function within
their powers and do not encroach on the fundamental rights of
the people. When one examines the performance of the judiciary
on the above parameters, particularly its role in this year, one
would be sorely disappointed. As an instrument of dispensation
of justice in individual cases, the judiciary remains a largely
non-functional institution, which is inaccessible and useless
for the vast majority of the people. Not more than 2% people of
the country can hope to get any meaningful justice through the
existing judicial system. While the poor cannot access the
system without lawyers whom they cannot afford, even those who
can access it, remain stuck in courts for years, by which time
the court’s judgement is useless or meaningless to them. On top
of all this is the considerable corruption of the judiciary,
facilitated by the total lack of transparency and accountability
of the judiciary. Thus justice through the present judicial
system remains an expensive illusion for the vast majority of
even those who have the means to access the system.
The repeated recommendations of the Law Commissions and even
the directions of the Supreme Court to substantially increase
the number of judges and courts have been ignored by the
government with contempt. The Supreme Court has also not
bothered to enforce their own orders about this. Both the
government and the Higher Courts are equally culpable in not
even filling the existing vacancies in the Courts. On an
average, more than 20% vacancies exist in courts at all levels
and at all times. These vacancies have been steadily increasing
during the past year. This is demonstrative of a callous neglect
of the need for an effective instrument for the dispensation of
justice, on the part of the government and the judiciary.
There is however a silver lining in the shape of the newly
passed Gram Nyayalaya Act, which promises to put in, place many
more courts at the block and tehsil level. These, because of
their supposed simple and informal procedures, should make them
accessible to common people without the mediation of lawyers. If
properly implemented and actualized, these Gram Nyayalayas can
make justice quick and accessible to the common people for at
least small disputes and petty crimes, which constitute the
majority of the disputes affecting ordinary citizens. These do
offer a ray of hope to the people, but given the past record of
the government in the lack of priority to the dispensation of
justice, its implementation on the ground will require
considerable public pressure.
On the other measure of acting as the guardian of the
Constitution, the judiciary’s performance has been equally
disheartening. Barring a few honourable exceptions, we find that
the judiciary has largely failed to protect the fundamental
rights of the people and failed to step in when the executive
and the legislature have made inroads into it. On Civil
liberties, we find that the courts have upheld the validity of
totally draconian laws like POTA and the Armed Forces Special
Powers Act. They have allowed the victimization and prolonged
incarceration of many totally peaceful, committed and selfless
activists like Binayak Sen and others, under these draconian
laws. Even when innocent persons are victimized for malafide
considerations by fabricating evidence, oral or documentary, the
judiciary has not taken steps to penalize the police officers
responsible for the same. This has resulted in a culture of
impunity in the police as a result of which they have been
casually picking up and falsely charging human rights and other
activists who are questioning the actions of the police and
other institutions of the ruling establishment. This
victimization, which effectively cripples an activist and ties
him down to courts for years, is now taking place on a massive
scale across the country. The courts, which are duty bound to
stop this, have been turning a blind eye to this massive
violation of the most basic rights of these activists. The
message going out is that peaceful protest and resistance to
establishment policies and actions is useless, forcing many
activists to rethink their strategy of peaceful resistance. The
past year has only seen the acceleration of this trend of
passive acceptance by the courts of the massive and gross
violation of the rights of activists. The Chief Justice of India
recently in a conference on Terrorism, Human Rights and the rule
of law gave a very enlightened speech on these issues and on the
obligation of the courts to ensure that Civil rights of alleged
terrorists are respected even in the present climate of
jingoism. One hopes that the Courts will imbibe the letter and
spirit of the Chief Justice’s speech in their rulings in cases
involving the Civil liberties of all people, particularly
activists.
Though the Supreme Court reopened the trial of the Best
Bakery case of Gujarat and has ordered the review of many
investigations by a special investigative team, the trials of
the major cases of the Gujarat genocide of 2002 have been stayed
by the Supreme Court for the last more than 3 years, and it has
not found the time to hear it. The Gujarat genocide has been one
of the most egregious examples of the violations of the rule of
law. It is a crying shame that those exposed to have been
responsible for the genocide are not only walking free but are
comfortably ensconced in positions of power from where they have
been preventing any proper investigations into the mass murders.
As a result, Gujarat has been turned into a virtually fascist
State where communal polarization is near total with no space
for secular politics. Gujarat remains the biggest blot on the
landscape for the rule of law in the country. Despite some
halfhearted attempts, the failure of the Supreme Court to deal
with a State, which has virtually seceded, from the Constitution
must count as another blot on its record.
Unfortunately, the role of the courts in protecting the
rights of the poor to a dignified life has been no more
illuminating. The rapid appropriation of land and resources from
the poor by the State for large Companies, domestic and
multinational, for SEZs, mining and other forms of commercial
development has accelerated during the past year. Far from
stopping this blatant transfer of resources from the poor to the
rich, the Courts have in fact abetted this loot, by giving
permission to companies like POSCO and Sterlite/Vedanta to
appropriate vast areas of forest land, being used by thousands
of tribal families for their rapacious mining. This massive
displacement of the poor and the appropriation of their land and
resources coupled with the decimation of agriculture, due to
government’s policies, has forced many to commit suicide, and
many to migrate to cities, where they have been forced to live
in sub human conditions in Jhuggies built on government land.
Far from ensuring that they get proper housing, which is their
fundamental right, the courts have been treating them like
“pickpockets”, and have often ordered the demolition of their
Jhuggies, without notice to them, in gross violation of Natural
Justice and their fundamental rights. All this is leading to the
buildup of massive anger among the poor directed at the
government and the courts. It should hardly be surprising that
Naxalites are finding more recruits and are gradually increasing
their sway in the country.
Part of the reason for this insensitivity of the judiciary
towards the poor is the manner of selection and appointment of
judges. This has been appropriated by the judiciary who has been
making the appointments in an arbitrary, non-transparent and
nepotistic manner. The higher judiciary has thus become a
self-perpetuating oligarchy. Even when appointments have been
shown to be made without even consulting the collegium of senior
judges, which was declared to be mandatory, the Supreme Court
has not set them aside. They have been stoutly resisting the
formation of in independent Judicial Commission, which could
select judges on some transparent and rational basis.
The past year has also seen the eruption of a large number of
judicial scandals. The Justice Sabharwal case was followed by
the Ghaziabad provident fund scam, involving more than 30
judges, including 10 from the higher Courts. Then came the
Chandigarh case, where Rs. 15 lacs in cash were delivered by the
clerk of the Additional Advocate General of Haryana to the
residence of a High Court Judge. This was apparently meant for
some other judge and was mistakenly delivered to another. The
CBI is still investigating both these cases. Then there was the
case of Justice Soumitra Sen of Calcutta who was found by a
Committee of 3 judges to have misappropriated large sums of
money, which he received as a court receiver. The Chief Justice
has recommended his impeachment more than 6 months ago, but
nothing has moved on that.
All these cases have highlighted the need for a
Constitutional Judicial Complaints commission to investigate
allegations against judges and take action against them. This is
again being stoutly resisted by the Judiciary which only wants
an “in-house body of sitting judges” alone to examine complaints
against judges. Bowing to the pressure from the judiciary, the
government has introduced the Judges Inquiry Amendment Bill to
provide for an in house judicial council to deal with complaints
against judges of the higher judiciary. Even if such a bill were
passed, it would be a non-starter with virtually no one daring
to make complaints before such an in-house body.
The silver lining however is, that the media has finally shed
its fear of contempt, and is now gleefully reporting these cases
of judicial corruption. Sometimes however, they go overboard by
reporting allegations, which may defame innocent judges before
their version is heard, and the truth determined. However, the
media glare and the attendant public campaign on judicial
accountability has certainly succeeded in bringing this issue to
the fore and has put pressure on the government and the
judiciary to urgently address this issue. I do not think that
they can resist this pressure much longer and the day is not far
when an independent Judicial Complaints Commission is set up to
examine complaints against judges and take action against them. |