Article 32: Rights for All or For a Favoured Few?

Arnab Goswami’s case seems to have been an exceptional one where the SC felt it needed to intervene. It felt no such compunction in the case of Varavara Rao and countless others.

When the law becomes a weapon of oppression rather than an equalising force, democracy is in danger. Article 32 deals with the ‘Right to Constitutional Remedies’, and affirms the right of an individual to move the Supreme Court (SC) by appropriate proceedings for the enforcement of the rights conferred in Part III of the constitution.

It states that the SC “shall have power to issue directions or orders or writs, including writs in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto and certiorari, whichever may be appropriate, for the enforcement of any of the rights conferred by this Part”. The right guaranteed by this Article “shall not be suspended except as otherwise provided for by this Constitution”.

Dr B.R. Ambedkar wanted a specific guarantee of fundamental rights expressly incorporated in the constitution so that it could be easily enforced. He drafted Article 25, which later became the current Article 32. Ambedkar said:

“If I was asked to name any particular article in this Constitution as the most important — an article without which this Constitution would be a nullity — I could not refer to any other article except this one. It is the very soul of the Constitution and the very heart of it.”

We see the importance of this as personal liberty is routinely violated by the police and governments, without any regard for constitutional guarantee. Article 32 of the constitution enables access to the apex court as a matter of right to every person, not just to a citizen.

For all practical purposes, the high courts are accessible only to a few. The common man gets a hearing only when someone takes up pro bono causes of public interest. By the same token, the SC too is quite inaccessible to the large majority of citizens, especially those outside the national capital region, and except, it would appear, to a privileged few – the television host Arnab Goswami, editor-in-chief of Republic TV, being the latest name in the news.

Also read: A List of Activists, Scholars and Scribes Whose Personal Liberty Remains at Judiciary’s Mercy

Precedent and practice

In L Chandra Kumar vs Union of India and Others (1997, 3 SCC 261, at SCC p. 301, Para 78), a bench of seven judges had unequivocally declared that Article 32 was an integral and essential feature of the constitution. This was reiterated by the Supreme Court in S P Sampath Kumar vs Union of India (1987, AIR 386, 1987 SCR (1) 435). Now the chief justice of India says that the Supreme Court wants to discourage petitions under Article 32 and has asked the high courts to exercise their power to protect the rights of individuals. Why then, did it act differently in the case of Arnab Goswami?

Varavara Rao (L) and Arnab Goswami (R). Illustration: The Wire

Siddique Kappan, a journalist, and three others were arrested while on their way to Hathras in UP,  to report an incident of alleged gang rape and murder. The UP police have alleged that Kappan and two members of the Campus Front of India (CFI) were part of a ‘conspiracy’ to inflame religious sentiments over the Hathras rape, and booked them on various charges, including sedition and under the UAPA.  The Kerala Union of Working Journalists is providing moral and legal support to the journalist and has invoked Article 32 through a writ petition. The SC, however, has said that the matter should be transferred to the high court in UP. A similar case invoking Article 32 involves Sameet Thakkar, a Nagpur resident, who had challenged the multiple FIRs against him for alleged derogatory tweets against Maharashtra chief minister Uddhav Thackeray and his ministers. The SC had then observed that “even high courts can uphold fundamental rights”.

Flip-flop by the Supreme Court

Goswami’s case under Article 32 is obviously thus the rarest of the rare for the SC to have entertained it. On November 11, he was granted interim bail by the SC. Though it had asked every high court to exercise its jurisdiction “to protect liberty… the ultimate reason for our existence as constitutional courts”, the SC held that the Bombay high court had erred in rejecting Goswami’s bail application.

Some other important cases have also been transferred by the SC on its own to its court. Recently, the case involving land use for the national capital’s Central Vista project was transferred by the SC to itself from the Delhi high court, though the petitioners did not ask for it. Similarly, in 2018, the SC had transferred the case seeking a probe into the death of judge B.H. Loya from the Bombay high court to itself.  When such transfers are made, the petitioners lose a stage of appeal that would otherwise have been available had the high courts heard and decided the case. Such transfers are in direct contradiction to the SC’s own assertion that the high court has the power to protect an individual’s rights.

Also read: I’m a Journalist, That’s Why I Don’t Stand With Arnab Goswami

On November 6, senior advocate Mahesh Jethmalani argued that his client Thakker had been arrested despite the fact that all charges against him in the FIR were bailable offences. The CJI refused to hear Thakkar’s case even as the counsel for the Maharashtra government said the state would not object to granting of bail as the investigation was complete in the case. “If your lordships are not shocked by this, nothing will shock you,” Jethmalani argued.  “We see such matters every day. We are immune to such shocks. Nothing will shock us now,” the CJI responded. Perhaps. But it is we the people who should be shocked at this volte face.

All these examples illustrate that the SC has conveniently changed its own position and has not allowed the high courts to act according to the constitutional mandate. Not to put too fine a point on it, but Goswami’s case seems to have been one of personal liberty being violated where the SC felt it needed to intervene, but it felt no such compunction in the case of Varavara Rao and countless others.

Questions but no answers

Can individuals be arrested on suspicion in an old case, in which the allegations are also not clear and the FIR had no mention of their names? Why were their bail petitions repeatedly rejected?  This has happened in the Bhima Koregaon case, to date no one knows what the evidence is that necessitated their immediate arrest and why they have been in jail without bail for two years.

Krishnadas Rajagopal, the law reporter for The Hindu, reported that the Supreme Court on October 29, 2020, did not order Varavara Rao’s immediate release from jail in spite of ill-health, even while it voiced its genuine concern over a month-long delay in the Bombay high court to hear urgent pleas on his behalf.

Justice U.U. Lalit heading a three-judge bench said, “The obstacle bothering us is that the matter is not being heard”. It asked the chief justice of the Bombay high court to list the case for hearing at the earliest.  Why could it not have transferred the case to itself as it did for Goswami? It is quite clear that the personal liberty of a right-wing journalist mattered more than that of an ailing 81-year-old poet and activist who has had false cases slapped on him throughout his life. What then is the credibility of the SC in the eyes of ordinary people?

Also read: Prompt Hearing of Arnab’s Habeas Plea Is Welcome, Let This Now Be the Norm for All

The case against Varavara Rao

The editor of the monthly literary magazine Srijana, Varavara Rao was accused of conspiracies against the Andhra Pradesh government. He spent years in trial and pre-trial custody but in no case could any of the allegations against him be proved.  It would appear that he has been incarcerated for his political ideology, not for any proven criminal act. Varavara Rao wrote Sahacharulu (1990) in the form of a prison diary. This was later published in English as Captive Imagination (2010). He also translated Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s prison diary Detained and his novel, Devil on the Cross, into Telugu.

Clockwise from top left: Sudhir Dhawale, Surendra Gadling, Mahesh Raut, Shoma Sen, Arun Ferreira, Sudha Bharadwaj, Varavara Rao and Vernon Gonsalves.

An FIR was filed by the Pune police, alleging that on the eve of the 200th anniversary of Koregaon Bhima, the Elgar Parishad that was organised and the speeches of leftist activists and leaders of underground Naxalite groups on December 31, 2017, were partially responsible for inciting the violence that occurred the next day, January 1, 2018. In August 2018, Varavara Rao, whose name is not mentioned in FIR, was arrested for suspected involvement in Koregaon Bhima incidents. Civil rights activists Rona Wilson, Arun Ferreira, Sudha Bharadwaj, Gautam Navlakha and Anand Teltumbde were also arrested in this case.

Varavara Rao filed a petition before the Telangana and Andhra Pradesh high courts, seeking to quash the transit remand warrant issued by the chief metropolitan magistrate, Hyderabad, on August 28. It was contended that the warrant was illegal and did not follow proper legal procedures. Justice B. Siva Sankara Rao admitted the petition on November 6 and suspended the warrant till November 17,  2018. Journalist N. Venugopal, brother in law of Varavara Rao, said that the judge suddenly changed his mind and dismissed the petition without hearing any arguments. The judge also found Rao medically fit enough to be remanded to the Pune jail.

Rao’s health deteriorated during detention in Taloja jail and he was admitted to J.J. Hospital in Mumbai, where he tested positive for COVID-19. A special court ordered a report on his health but bail was not granted. In June 2020, bail was sought following a government recommendation that elderly inmates and those with co-morbidities should be released from jail in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, but this was denied again.  The bail application was supported by fourteen members of parliament, who wrote a letter to the chief minister. It was also supported by two former central information commissioners of India, who raised doubts about the alleged conspiracy case, and called on the NIA to share information with the Mumbai police regarding the case.

Also read: Supreme Court’s Selective Approach Will Not Prevent the ‘Path of Destruction’

Some are more equal than others

During the hearing of Varavara Rao’s bail application, the SC questioned the solicitor general Tushar Mehta who intervened to submit that every prisoner’s health was a concern for the state and such an order in Rao’s case may lead to other prisoners also seeking the same relief on medical grounds. Justice Ravindra Bhat, on the bench, reacted to Mehta, “That should not deter us… If the health condition of every prisoner requires that [sending him or her to the hospital for treatment], then every prisoner should be sent. Health is health… who would want a death in jail?”

The petitioner’s wife said her husband had become very weak and needed critical medical care for neurological issues along with the after-effects of COVID-19. With the apex court’s advice, the Bombay high court took up the case on November 12. Indira Jaising contended that the state had not submitted a complete medical report, in contravention of the high court’s directions. “The report, which is submitted to you now, is an eyewash. I am earnestly requesting he be moved to Nanavati hospital so that a proper medical report can be submitted to you. We have been saying he is suffering from dementia, where is the report on that?” Jaising argued. But the judges allowed a medical examination only through video conferencing and deferred the hearings.

As of Wednesday, November 18, 2020, the Bombay high court has ordered that Varavara Rao be shifted to Nanavati hospital for fifteen days.

Will this be, as in countless other cases, a case of too little too late, as justice delayed is justice denied. While a high-profile right-wing journalist has been given the benefit of Article 32, Varavara Rao, now 81 and suffering on multiple medical counts, has been in jail since November 2018. All his bail petitions have been denied.

Surely this is not what Dr Ambedkar and the framers of our constitution had envisaged would be the fate of the common man in relation to Article 32, which affirms and promises the right for all, not for a favoured few.

M. Sridhar Acharyulu is a former central information commissioner and dean, School of Law, Bennett University.

Azamgarh: In Crackdown on CAA Protesters, Police Accused of Pelting Stones, Using Slurs

Protesters who had been holding a sit-in since Tuesday alleged that the police used force to evict them early on Wednesday.

New Delhi: In the latest instance of crackdown against anti-Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) protesters in the state, the Uttar Pradesh police on Wednesday arrested 19 people for sedition, including a minor, in Azamgarh. The police have registered a case under several sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and named 35 persons in the FIR.

According to a statement released by the local police, the protesters were allegedly raising slogans against the government and nation. The police further claimed that “they were saying they will snatch azadi and will get azadi anyhow. They were making hateful announcements against the Hindu religion. They were abusing Prime Minister Narendra Modi and UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath.”

The protesters, who had been holding a sit-in against the CAA and NRC at Jauhar Park in the Kasimganj area of Biliryagaj, Azamgarh since Tuesday, have alleged that the police used force to evict them early in the morning on Wednesday. According to the Indian Express, when the women protesters questioned the police action, they were pelted with stones.

“The men and boys were caught and arrested. After that, we were lathicharged. Some women have sustained injuries,” claimed a 45-year-old woman protester while speaking to the newspaper. “All through this, police used communal slurs and all kinds of abuses,” claimed the woman, who refused to be identified, fearing a backlash.

“They used all their force to remove us from the protest site and when we did not give up, they caught the men and started beating them,” Yasmeen Khan, a protester told The Quint, adding “then, they pelted bricks and stones on us before resorting to lathicharge. This left many women injured.”

Watch: ‘UP Police Kicked and Beat Us in Custody,’ Say Activists Arrested in Lucknow

According to an eye-witness Hafiz Danish Falahi, a woman sustained serious injuries on her head and is reportedly in critical condition. The witness also said that children were injured in the chaos.

The district police have denied the allegations and claimed that women and children were “put at the front and were holding stones and lathis” and it was “part of a conspiracy”. The police also denied that they had conducted a lathi-charge but acknowledged that tear gas was used against protesters. Bilariyaganj Station Officer (SHO), Manoj Kumar Singh, said “six-seven tear gas shells were used on Wednesday morning. There was no lathi-charge”.

Meanwhile, there was heavy police deployment in the area and most shops have been shut. According to the Indian Express, protesters have alleged that police had filled the park with water to “stop them from holding a peaceful protest”. Most locals the newspaper spoke to said that the entire neighbourhood was living in fear of the police. “We are scared because the police have named so many people and can pick up anyone. They have invoked such serious charges against the protesters,” a shopkeeper told the newspaper, requesting anonymity.

According to the report, Sarwari Bano, the woman who had to undergo a surgery Wednesday after she was hit by a stone at the protest site has regained consciousness. “She is stable now. She has a clot on her brain because of the injury to her head and hence, we had to operate on her. The operation went well and she might be discharged soon,” said Dr Mohammad Arif, a staff employee at the private hospital in Azamgarh, where she has been hospitalised.

The minor arrested and booked for sedition and other charges, works as a cleaner in a dhaba. As per the news report, the family of the boy claimed that his date of birth is March 1, 2004. “We told the policemen that he is not 18. They did not listen to us and said that he is a rioter and will go to jail…He works as a cleaner at a dhaba and was on his way to work when he was picked up by police around 6:30 am on Wednesday,” his brother told the Indian Express.

Also read: In Local Courts, UP Police’s Cases Against Anti-CAA Protesters Fall Apart

Asked by the newspaper if the family has visited the boy in jail, his brother said, “No, we haven’t. Police told us that we can’t meet him yet. We will try again on Friday. We don’t have his birth certificate. We are uneducated and poor and keeping documents is not a priority for us. We did not see this day coming.”

Bilariyaganj SHO Manoj Kumar Singh said that the court will decide whether the boy is minor or not. “For us, he is a rioter. He was arrested from the spot and was sent to jail on Wednesday. It is up to the court to decide whether he is a minor or an adult,” Singh told the Indian Express on Thursday.

By Making Protestors Pay for Damages, UP Govt Is Ignoring Supreme Court Guidelines

The Adityanath government’s move is a thinly-veiled attempt to divert attention from police excesses.

Note: This article was first published on December 27, 2019 and republished on January 2, 2020.

The Uttar Pradesh government’s attempt to demand damages for the destruction of property by protestors is clearly a ruse to divert attention from police excesses. Somehow, Adityanath’s government seems to have forgotten that it is the rights that are fundamental and not the repression.

The state of UP has certainly not obeyed the diktat of the constitution not to impose unreasonable restrictions on the right “to assemble peacefully without arms” even in the interests of public order or the sovereignty and integrity of India. Having violated this most fundamental of constitutional duties, UP now wants to clamp down further on the repressed and exonerate the repressors.

Destroying property

Nobody can claim the right to destroy private or public property. It is a crime and a tort for which damages can be awarded by a court of law. But the method and due process by which this is to be done cannot be arbitrary or target the innocent.

This matter confronted the Supreme Court when the Gujjar protest resulted in massive damage to private and public properties and in Re Destruction of Public and Private Properties (2007), I was appointed amicus curiae on June 5, 2007. I told the court that random impositions of criminal or civil liabilities was not possible and suggested the appointment of the Justice Thomas Committee to examine the Prevention of Damage to Public Properties Act, 1984 (PDPPA) and other legislation and Fali S. Nariman to examine the duties of the media. In addition, K. Parasaran and I also met the paramilitary authorities which had sent 6 companies to quell the riots.

The PDPPA was woefully inadequate and simply created a new offence with a punishment of up to six months with fine for ordinary cases and, where fire and explosives were used between one and 10 years imprisonment with fine. Criminality requires due process not collective or individual finger pointing.

Also read: Ground Report: Families of Two Young Men Felled by Bullets in Bijnor Contest Police Claims

At that point in time, Justice Pasayat was in a self-imposed race to be known as the Supreme Court judge who delivered the most judgments and orders. In this frenzy, he often plagiarised passages from other judgments without acknowledgement and copiously copied from written submissions. In this case, I had drafted the submissions incorporating crucial inputs from Justice Thomas and Fali Nariman. The judgment does little more than reproduce the reports of the committee, which were presented without too much discussion and the judgment only said things like “The recommendations of the Justice Thomas Committee according to us are wholesome and need to be accepted”.

The Nariman Committee’s submissions were accepted with less flourish. Without more input, the recommendations of both committees were accepted and the judgment proceeded with some more extensive scissor and paste on the powers of the court. It does not really matter how the guidelines were enunciated. It might have been better if fundamental principles of complicity and liability were examined threadbare. But what the Supreme Court lays down is the law of the land.

The destruction by the Gujjar demonstration was massive and ran across Rajasthan, Haryana, UP and Delhi. The army was summoned. My report on the affidavits shows that many FIRs were filed and arrests made, and huge damage to private and public property. I note from my report that a DTC bus was also burnt at New Friends Colony, where I live (ironically we saw a repeat of this recently). The Jantar Mantar protests were peaceful.

In May 2007, police firing took place on NH8 and NH11 and near Bundi, and in the villages of Morda, Bayana, Bonli and Virat Nagar, killing 18 persons. In Patoli, the crowd lynched a policeman to death. In turn the Gujjars were violently opposed by the Meenas. I looked at each report with horror but also analysed all feeds of CNN IBN, Times Now, NDTV, Sahara News and Star News to report to the committees that the media had not exaggerated and had acted responsibly.

The court ignored the detail on who was responsible, thus blaming everybody, and issued scissor-paste guidelines. But mindful of free speech, the bench accepted the Nariman report that no guidelines were needed because statutory bodies and voluntary codes were enough.

What was significant, though, was that then Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje entered into five rounds of negotiations, four of which collapsed. But the fifth round, on June 4, 2007, was successful and the Bainsla-Raje agreement was unanimously approved by the Gujjar mahapanchayat at Pushkar. The army was called back to the barracks.

This is important and in sharp contrast to the reaction to the CAA protests of 2019, where the Union government and those of UP and Karnataka simply did not care to enter into any discourse with the protestors but simply lashed out at them.

Also read: In Bijnor, Children Give Harrowing Accounts of Beating by UP Police After CAA Protest

Why was this? Raje knew she wanted to please several vote banks – Gujjars, Meenas and other OBCs, ST and SCs. In 2019, the BJP governments at the Centre and in states feel that they can ignore Muslim votes and Left-liberal protests because their solid vote bank is the Hindu conglomerates, including the gundas it compulsively reaches out to. They simply don’t care for the rest, as long as the divide and rule works. The second reason is that the BJP simply does not give up its ‘muscular (anti-)nationalism’ against the Muslim whom its cohorts demonise.

UP’s damages strategy

Under the guidelines of the Supreme Court in the Gujjar case, states and their high courts (and where the damage went beyond one state, the Centre and the Supreme Court) should take charge. Justice Sudhir Agarwal of the Lucknow bench (of Babri Masjid fame) lamented that the PDPP Act was not being invoked, not quite appreciating all the directions in light of the impotence of the PDPP Act and the full import of the Supreme Court’s guidelines.

But Adityanath has ignored much of all this since he is hell bent on not putting the blame on the police and blaming the protestors, who are not of the BJP. The ‘modalities’ laid down by the Supreme Court require not just videography but also that “…VII. The Police should immediately inform the State government with report on the events, including damage, if any by the police”. Note the emphasis on the damage done by the police.

Watch: Ground Report: What Caused the Violence in Muzaffarnagar?

The next modality VIII reads: “The State Government should prepare a report on the police reports and should file a petition including its reports in the High Court or Supreme Court as the case maybe for the Court to take suo motu action”. Thus the entire exercise was to be under the aegis of the courts to finally determine matters, and not the state or Central government. The reports have to be placed before these courts. Somehow, Adityanath seems to have gazumped the idea but not the process.

Equally important are the guidelines which require the claims commissioner to seek guidance from the high court and Supreme Court. Of course the police-caused damages have to be addressed, according to the modalities. Without this essential part, the report of the police and state government would be incomplete and inadequate. Damages were also to be awarded for “…causing injury or death to a person and persons.” For the state government to target private demonstrators and ignore police action is anathema.

Pretending to be more virtuous than virtue, the state has projected some damages quantified in monetary terms. But the real point is that complicity and specific liability have to be proved before the claims commissioner, who has the duty “…to pinpoint the damage and establish nexus with the perpetrators of the damage”. Obviously he had to examine the material and the people in order to obviate this becoming a paper-only exercise.

During discussions on the Gujjar protest cases, both committees were concerned that a crime (there can be no doubt that any such probe was certainly to investigate a crime) needed to follow all the incidences of due process. Nariman was also in favour of considering civil action through tort. These concerns find place in the Supreme Court’s view that these directions should be superseded by statutory remedies, which it was hoped will be enacted.

Also read: Police Attacked Students With Intent of Maximum Damage: Fact Finding Report on Jamia

Ten years later, such a law has not been enacted. Despite their limitations and incomplete fairness, even these guidelines have not been invoked before. The reason for this is that the police atrocities would also come under the scanner and even point to orders issued by the government. These guidelines did not authorise unilateral action by a state, but required the high court and Supreme Court’s supervision.

The UP government must also remember that according to the seven-judge Allahabad high court decision in Amarawati (2004) there is no compulsion to arrest where there is a cognisable offence overruling what the court said earlier. Amarawati was confirmed by the Supreme Court in Lal Kamlendra’s case (2009). In the present protests, the state has detained more than 5,000 persons and arrested more than 1,000.

For the moment, it is clear that the actions of the Adityanath government are diversionary and an insult, exposing the partiality of a fanatical government undermining all that is sacred to the rule of law and good governance.

Rajeev Dhavan in a senior advocate.

UP Policeman Shoots Dead Man Driving Car, Murder Case Filed

According to the constable, the killing was in “self-defence”. 

New Delhi: A policeman in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh allegedly shot dead a civilian at around 1:30 am on Friday night after the civilians car rammed into the patrol bike. According to the constable, the killing was in “self-defence”.

Vivek Tewari, a 38-year-old assistant sales manager with Apple, was in his car with a former colleague, Sana Khan, when the incident occurred, according to Hindustan Times. Constable Prashant Kumar, who fired at the car, and his colleague Sandeep Kumar were arrested after the police registered an FIR on Khan’s complaint.

“The constable (Prashant) fired in self defence believing that some criminals were inside the car as the victim tried to flee after hitting the patrol bike,” senior superintendent of police Kalanidhi Naithani told Hindustan Times.

“The constables intercepted their vehicle and asked them to stop, however, the vehicle went ahead and rammed a lamp-post. Later, Prashant fired at the vehicle which hit the windscreen of the vehicle and bumped into Tewari,” Times of India has quoted Khan’s statement as saying.

Director general of police O.P. Singh told Hindustan Times the initial probe suggests Kumar “acted beyond the limit of self defence”. He said a murder case has been filed and a fair investigation.

Tewari was taken to Lohia hospital, where he was declared dead. He is survived by his wife and two daughters.