The Judiciary Needs to Be Gently Reminded About the Constitution and Its Key Concepts

India’s constitutional courts were put in place to protect the rights of all, especially those not in the majority. The judiciary had a great opportunity to do just that but squandered it.

Someone very poignantly said, “We are all dying – that is the condition of living.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who very bravely and unilaterally imposed the nationwide lockdown with just four hours’ notice on March 24, has now, after ostensible consultation with chief ministers, as shown on our television sets, lifted it from June 8. Of course, in a graded manner and with restrictions.

Perhaps he realised the meaning of the line I began this article with. Critics might rightly say that the timing of both decisions was wrong. 

If only he had kept national interest at heart and given serious thought at the end of January itself – by merely prohibiting foreigners from entering India and making Indians returning from abroad compulsorily go through four weeks of strict quarantine – the pandemic could have been better controlled. 

But that would have meant not being able to shake hands with Donald Trump during his visit. It would also have barred the entry of a few thousand NRIs to be part of the fanfare in Ahmedabad.

So that would have, in turn, meant no publicity for our prime minister and no work for his PR machinery to deliver a larger than life image of an international leader. 

Of course, a temporary ban on international visitors would have stopped hundreds of foreigners from attending the Nizammuddin Markaz. But then, how the minority bashing have become possible? And how would the police, especially in Delhi and Uttar Pradesh, have been able to criminalise the sickness of unfortunate patients?

Also read: Report Says Tablighi Chief’s Viral Audio Clip May Have Been Doctored, Police Deny Claim

On a more pertinent note, New Zealand has declared itself a ‘coronavirus-free’ nation. And one of the reasons attributed is the timely banning of foreigners and the compulsory quarantining of returning citizens. That is how a responsible and responsive government acts.

In India, our government can play with the lives of millions of citizens and wreak havoc on the economy, further affecting hundreds of millions, with impunity. There is no accountability whatsoever.

Our politicians, across the spectrum, only care for themselves, their well cut images and electoral successes. What else can one say except that it is political nakedness which is on display in the Rajya Sabha election in Gujarat at a time of national crisis.

Also read: Rajasthan: Impending RS Polls Set off Alarm Bells as Gehlot Makes off With MLAs

On the one hand, the BJP government at the Centre invokes the Disaster Management Act to fight the ostensible disaster, and on the other it is creating a political disaster by using everything at its command to buy one more seat in the upper house. We, the citizens, have to sit and watch in indignation. 

In India, democracy functions only during elections. Once it is over, and they are in the driver’s seat, politicians forget who put them there. 

But they alone are not to be blamed. The very constitution which has created the executive has also created the legislature and more importantly, the judiciary.

The executive power of the Union vests in the president and he shall exercise that power in accordance with the constitution as per article 53 of the constitution . Thus that power is clearly hedged by the contours of the constitution and is not outside of it . 

The framers were clear in their intentions. There must be checks and balances within the state. Parliament may not keep that check in constitutional spirit due to majoritarianism of the party in power, although it should. Yet, the constitution of India is founded on the principle of ‘pluralism’ and rejects the idea of a single norm. Here, the judiciary’s role assumes great significance.

If there was no constitution, there would have been no power to strike down laws and executive actions. Judicial review is foundational in the Indian constitution and the judiciary alone can interpret the constitution. In fact, it is their duty.

The judiciary was, notably, not created by the framers to be “the least dangerous branch.”

The constitution establishes concepts and not conceptions. Clear provisions in the constitution emphatically say so. Framers gave citizens fundamental rights and enjoined the Supreme Court and the high courts to protect them under Articles 32 and 226 respectively. 

Also read: The Delhi High Court Was Right to Call NIA to Account for Gautam Navlakha’s Hasty Removal

Judicial review of laws and administrative actions is thus expressly mandated. The constitution recognises one paramount principle: “Be you ever so high, the law is above you.”

‘Judicial activism’ is therefore a misnomer. The constitution delegates power to the courts to enforce its own conceptions of political morality so long as its conception is relatable to standard concepts, i.e., the articles thereunder. 

It is political skepticism which seeks to label this as judicial activism. Skeptics seek to restrict judicial power by fashioning labels of judicial restraint or judicial deference as democratic arguments, saying moral and political principles must be resolved by institutions which are politically responsible – which courts are not. Democracy does not mean so. In fact there is no rule limiting judicial review. Our Supreme Court has gone to the extent of holding that “there is no decision which is un-reviewable under the constitution.” 

Also read: The Supreme Court Is Locked Down and Justice Is in ‘Emergency’ Care

Issues relating to fundamental rights should not be left to the majorities because our constitution seeks to restrain majorities.

If so, can such issues be left to the majority so it can become the judge in its own cause? Definitely not, as that would be inconsistent and unjust. Disputes involving citizens’ rights are best protected by courts rather than institutions of government, which would be clearly hostile. The only effective review is in courts. 

It would be unconstitutional to allow those in political power to be the sole judges of their own decisions.

Any argument of judicial tyranny is overshadowed by unfairness in allowing the majority to be a judge in its own cause. This is only to provide limits to the power of the majority and not to give any additional or unconstitutional power to the judiciary. 

Courts develop constitutional principles based on constitutional morality, plus a set of rules that justify governmental actions. Courts do indeed lean in favour of community morality or what is called the “public interest”; part of this process is to give meaning to life and dignity as encompassed in Article 21. 

The migrant crisis, involving violations of a bundle of those rights of hundreds of millions of citizens following the fateful lockdown demanded that the judiciary activate itself. If only the Supreme Court or a high court has stayed that declaration for a week or so to enable government to facilitate the transfer of migrant workers in a humane manner, the whole problem would have been solved without any affront to the government. This would have amounted to simple judicial function and not activism. The migrants had nowhere to turn. 

Also read: Have SC’s Directions to Redress Migrants’ Suffering Brought Necessary Course-Correction?

What a golden opportunity the judiciary missed of wiping away the tears of teeming millions! Their much delayed reaction to the crisis is an admission of initial failure and is too late and too little. 

How and if at all the nation compensates them for their sufferings is a vexed question which judges have not even attempted to answer. 

Judges, too, make mistakes. But they cannot simply forego their duty to uphold the basic human rights of citizens – the very rights which can be taken away by a heartless government. The danger of attracting the criticism of judicial activism is vastly overshadowed by the outcome of justice being meted out to citizens, especially from the poor and vulnerable sections of the society.

It was for these citizens that the Public Interest Litigation or PIL was conceived by great judges. In fact, the time has come to sensitise judges not just to the problems of the poor and helpless but as to their own powers and duties.

If this does not work, the nation must think of changing the process of selecting judges and not change the technique of judging. 

I am reminded of the words of a great historian who said:

I would not care whether the truth is pleasant or unpleasant, in consonance with or opposed to current views. I would not mind in the least whether the truth is or is not a blow to the glory of the country.

If necessary, I shall bear in patience the ridicule and slander of friends and society for the sake of preaching truth. But still I shall seek truth, understand truth, accept truth.”

This should be the firm resolve of every citizen, and even more so of every judge. 

Dushyant Dave is a senior advocate at the Supreme Court of India and the President of Supreme Court Bar Association.

The views expressed are personal do not represent the views of the Bar. 

Hunger, Humanitarian Crisis and Infinite Injustices

“As people are marching in a bid to reach their homes and never return to the cities that betrayed them, the worst part of India’s history is being recorded silently.”

Like the rest of the world, India is in the grip of a global pandemic.

However, unlike elsewhere, the poor migrant workers have had to face unimaginable hardship in India as the Centre and most of the state governments miserably failed to take care of both lives and livelihoods. The nation is under a humanitarian crisis and those who were already facing  existential hardship due to high unemployment and growth recession, are now totally pauperised.

They clearly are in struggle to survive, the big claims of a Rs 20 lakh crore stimulus package mean nothing to them as they are literally on the road, walking hundreds of miles without food, water, shelter and hope. Their toddlers and growing children are maturing up unnaturally as they share the grief, hunger and survival concerns of their helpless parents.

In the middle of May, the highways of India are hosting the worst kind of human sufferings and show how the nation has failed a vast segment of population while keeping faith in the policies and action devoid from realism.

Also read: Auraiya: 24 Migrant Workers Killed, 36 Injured as Two Trucks Carrying Them Home Collide

Ironically, both Karl Marx and Adam Smith are out of the economic game-plan of the Central government. For the first time, Left parties and Mumbai industrialists have converged on the demand for putting adequate money in the hands of the poor and unemployed.

But the Centre has provided a cash relief of less than 1% of GDP. A continuing disdain for the knowledge ecosystem and delegating mechanism have been its defining character. The policy-makers in the finance ministry and NITI Aayog are not in position to make their own minds when it comes to knowing what they are supposed to do.

When it was expected that the Central government would allocate sufficient resources to the states and keep an active monitoring on spending, what was delivered was the opposite. In public domain, there have been complaints from non-BJP ruled states over the huge funds shortage and non-cooperation from the Centre. When the lockdown was dramatically announced on March 24, 2020, and extended again and again – the government in Delhi unwaveringly offered rhetoric and excuses.

At no point of time was anything worthwhile thought out for the poorest of poor living in the dark shades of the urban jungle.

When the situation went out of control, the special trains were operationalised to take the migrants home and let the states feel the real burn. Even to this date, no one can be sure about the provisions borne by the Railways or state governments.

Also read: Fact Check: No, the Centre Isn’t Paying for Migrant Workers’ Train Journeys Home

There is no clarity about the expenses on the arrangement and who pays how much, these are unprecedented like the severity of a coronavirus that has brought the world to a halt.

The suffering and pain can’t be covered in figures, however, it is important to take note of a finding of the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE). COVID-19 and the nationwide lockdown has resulted in a job loss of around 27 million youth in the age group of 20-30 years in April 2020.

Stranded Workers Action Network’s Report, 21 Days and Counting: Covid-19 Lockdown, Migrant Works and the Inadequacy of Welfare Measures in India covers the grim realities of humanitarian crisis‬. As per the report, “A survey of 11,159 migrant workers stranded in various states found that between April 8 and April 13, more than 90 percent did not receive rations from the government. Close to 90% of those surveyed did not get paid by their employers. From March 27 to April 13, 70% of the surveyed workers had only less than Rs 200 left with them.”

Taking undue advantage of crisis, few state governments are changing or abolishing labour laws at their will in complete violation to the constitution. Such an alarming precedent will immensely harm the workers’ interest and industrial culture. It must be stopped.

Also read: After UP, Gujarat Offers 1,200-Day Labour Law Exemptions for New Industrial Investments

The month of April was comparatively benign than May, now we have far more numbers of tragically-stiffen incidences besides the macroeconomic troubles.

The month has also witnessed the sensational announcement of Rs 20 lakh crores package by the prime minister and its five-round long decoding by the Finance Minister and simultaneous interpretation by MoS (Finance).

All done beautifully except the fact that shows failed to secure anything substantial for the immediate relief of poor, stranded migrants, middle classes, working classes and MSMEs. The package has no stimulus and even liquidity infusion through it can’t be valued more than Rs 3.5 lakh crore. Rest everything in ‘package’ was the load in the forms of credit facilities, IT refunds, PF twisting, MSMEs due claims, etc.

The highlight of the entire exercise remained the Finance Minister’s masterstroke in which she announced Public Private Partnership (PPP) for exploring opportunities in space, especially for inter-planetary travel.

This was part of package, although no provision was made for safely transporting countless poorest Indians.

Also read: Modi’s ‘Stimulus Package’ is a Gigantic Confidence Trick Played on the People of India

Next to the story of hunger and humanitarian crisis scripted by the government, it was expected that justice will be served by the judiciary. However, the justice was not served.

Earlier too, the Supreme Court had abdicated its responsibilities. However, this time, it has become callous with the statement, ‘What can we do if they are walking on the road; what can we do if they sleep on railways tracks.’

Hypothetically put, if the 24 workers who died in the accident in Auraiya in Uttar Pradesh approached the Supreme Court, they would have been told that if they travelled by road then accidents would happen, and thus, what can the court do?

As people are marching in a bid to reach their home and to never return to the cities that betrayed them, the worst part of India’s history is being recorded silently.

Will Supreme Court take notice of the fact that the government presented wrong facts to it when it claimed that no migrant is on the road. Is the Hon’ble Supreme Court sorry that it too failed these helpless people?

Will it look into it even now and ensure justice to them? The infinite injustices will dent the image of India. Since the nation is immortal unlike a political party and the government, deep thought should be given on how to save the people who are the victims of new political narratives.

The people of India surely deserve to get better deal.

Yashwant Sinha is India’s former Minister of Finance (1998-2002) and Minister of External Affairs (2002-2004). Atul K. Thakur is a Delhi-based policy professional and columnist.