Indian
justice system: Supreme Court denies political role in selecting Judges! -Dr. Abdul Ruff
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The Supreme Court's verdict on October 16, striking down the BJP-led
central government's proposed National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC)
that gives ample hopes of political and governmental manipulations in justice
delivery system of India, making early justice more complicated.
The five-judge bench verdict of Supreme Court gives a sense that it
has taken the NJAC as an encroachment in their jurisdictional space. The new
law envisaged that NJAC, a six-member panel, headed by the Chief Justice of
India, and including two senior-most Supreme Court judges, Union Minister of
Law and Justice and two “eminent persons” nominated by a committee comprising
the Prime Minister, CJI and Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha or leader of the
largest Opposition party in the Lok Sabha, will select judges of the apex court
and state high courts. The NJAC came into existence in April but it never
became functional.
Supreme Court of India cited the Emergency of 1975-77, imposed by the
then Congress government, while striking down a new law that would have given
the government a role in the appointment of judges.
Friday’s verdict has nullified a 15-year effort by the National
Commission to review Constitution, Law Commission, two houses of Parliament, 20
states, successive governments and of various public forums.
Accepting the petitioners' argument centered on the Emergency when
Justice HR Khanna, who dissented against the Indira Gandhi government, was
superceded, the court said: "Such control in the hands of the executive...
would cause immense inroads in the decision making process" and
"could result in judges trying to placate and appease the
political-executive segment, aimed at personal gains and rewards."
The apex court said the changes brought by the government do not
ensure primacy of judiciary in the selection and appointment of judges. The
"basic structure" of the Constitution would be clearly violated if
the process of selection of judges to the higher judiciary was to be conducted,
in the manner contemplated through the NJAC (National Judicial Appointments
Commission).
Since the executive has a major stake in a majority of cases, the
participation of the Union Law Minister, as a Member of the National Judicial
Accountability Commission, would be clearly questionable. The participation of
the Law Minister in the final determinative process and that of the Prime
Minister and the Leader of the Opposition in the selection of "eminent
persons" would be a retrograde step, and cannot be accepted.
The sensitivity of selecting judges is so enormous, and the
consequences of making inappropriate appointments so dangerous, that if those
involved in the process of selection and the appointment of judges to the
higher judiciary, make wrongful selections, it may well lead the nation into a
chaos of sorts.
The collegium cannot be blamed for all the ills in the appointment of
judges - the political executive has to share the blame equally if not more,
since it mortgaged its constitutional responsibility of maintaining a check on
what may be described as the erroneous decisions of the collegium. 9)To say
that the collegium system has failed and that it needs replacement would not be
a correct or a fair post mortem.
It is true that there has been
criticism (sometimes scathing) of the decisions of the collegium, but it must
not be forgotten that the executive had an equally important participative role
in the integrated process of the appointment of judges. The judges agreed that
the system could be improved as a lack of transparency, accountability and
objectivity had been noted. The Collegium system needs to be improved requiring
a 'glasnost' and a 'perestroika', and the case needs to be heard further in
this regard.
The independence of the judiciary and a transparent system for the
appointment of judges are of equal importance as both of them are interlinked.
However, the Narendra Modi-led federal government tried to rush through the
bill to change the system of judges' appointment in higher judiciary to wrest
control of it and the Supreme Court has rightly quashed it, declaring both the
99th constitutional amendment as well as the bill to create the NJAC as
unconstitutional. Central government
never comes to the rescue of those Indians who are ill treated or denied
justice by government system and as such
the newly proposed system would
grant addition powers to the government to protect the interests of ruling elites and deny justice e to the
needy. That would make the life of
common people more difficult.
There is no denying the fact that the collegium system for appointment
of judges, which has been in existence for over two decades now, is not an
ideal system and requires drastic changes. The party said the new appointment
system for judges could have been worse than the existing one. If the collegium
system is opaque, then the now axed NJAC was heavily loaded in favour of the
ruling party. Had it been implemented, it would have led to gross political
interference in the appointment of judges. Courts would be automatically
brought under the government control.
The Apex court ruled that the
Judges will continue to appoint judges. The Supreme Court has invalidated the
99th Constitutional Amendment and National Judicial Appointments Commission
(NJAC) Act “unanimously” passed by both Houses of Parliament and ratified by 20
states. The passage of the NJAC bill and consequent constitutional amendment in
August last year was termed as the single biggest effort at judicial reform in
independent India.
Though the idea of NJAC was mooted during the Atal Bihari Vajpayee
government and a bill to this effect was introduced by the UPA I after rounds
of scrutiny by parliamentary committees, it got a massive push from the
Narendra Modi government. This ensured the passage of the bill in the first
full-fledged session since Modi took office.
Communication and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad who as the then Law
Minister had piloted the bill in both Houses of Parliament strongly defended
the 99th constitutional amendment saying “this was a unique occasion on the
political horizon of India when both Houses of Parliament unanimously passed
the bill barring one member walking out and 20 states ratifying it.” He cared a damn about the fallout of a
judicial system directly controlled by the regime. He reacted to the verdict in
the routine way, saying the government “welcomes the judgment and has full
faith in the judiciary and respects its independence” but made his criticism of
the verdict known.
BJP expected the Supreme court to
just approve the government policy. Law Minister Sadanand Gowda expressed
surprise at the SC verdict. The Supreme Court has said that it will do away
with the shortcomings of the collegium system and make it more transparent.
Prasad said it is an admission that the present system had
shortcomings and it needed a correction. Though he said that the government
would take a position — whether to seek a review by a larger bench or refer it
to Parliament — after a detailed reading of the verdict, he clearly expressed
government’s unhappiness over the matter.
Prasad named several former judges and chief justices of Supreme Court
who had expressed their reservation over the manner in which the collegiums
functioned to appoint judges. He said even then Chief Justice JS Verma, the
principal author of the 1993 judgment, which brought the collegium system into
existence, later said that his verdict had been misread and suggested a review.
While speaking for the bill, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had said in
Parliament that the amendments will ensure transparency in the appointments of
judges. "The effort now is that we restore the spirit of original
Constitution."
There is an argument that the Constitution envisages and puts a system
in place to ensure the balance of power involving the executive, the
legislature and the judiciary. The judiciary has the power and jurisdiction to
review the functioning of the executive and the legislature and thus, it is
supremely important that the appointment of judges remains above board. They
can’t have absolute power in appointments. There have been a number of examples
where sons, daughters, daughters-in-law and sons-in-law of judges have been
appointed judges. Occasional voices of malpractice and corruption in the
judiciary keep cropping up.
It appears the BJP government is eager to bring judiciary not just
under the ruling party but also the RSS and irrespective of whether BJP or
Congress party riles India, the RSS, with which both BJP and Congress as well
as many other parties, maintain links,
can very tactfully control the
judiciary, form local to supreme court.
Now BJP-RSS has one very important issue to deal with. They want to end the Babri mosque
destruction case once for all and get a clean chit to all those criminal
elements involved in the ghastly demolition of a great historic Mosque in
India. In order to achieve this, BJP wants uniform voice among all supreme
court judges in favor of Hindutva moorings and against Islam, Muslims and the
Babri Mosque which fell helplessly to the crude weaponized mob on 06 th January 1992. And,
hence the RSS-BJP wants to appoint judges. .
The issue has generated enough debates in the media, especially in TV
channels. Many top jurists and lawyers have expressed their opinion, mostly in
favor the judgment. No doubt, the judgment on the vulnerable justice issue is
yet another feather in the decorated cap of Indian apex court.
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