Business Standard

SUPREME COURT DENIES STAY ON SC/ST VERDICT

Review of judgment on SC/ST Atrocities Act to be heard after 10 days

- M J ANTONY & ARCHIS MOHAN

The Supreme Court said on Tuesday it would consider the Centre's review petition against its March 20 judgment on the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes Act but declined to keep in abeyance the directions passed by it to deal with the issues of arrest and sanction under the special law. The court said people who are agitating might not have read the judgment properly and must have been misled by people with vested interests.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to modify its judgment on the SC/ST Atrocities Act but posted the review petition, moved by the central government, for full hearing after 10 days. Meanwhile, the parties and intervener­s in the original case can file written submission­s. The court did not pass any final order.

However, the government has been criticised by the opposition parties, Dalit organisati­ons, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP's) allies and its Dalit leadership. It has been criticised for not filing the review petition earlier, and is now being asked to bring an ordinance in Parliament.

In the Lok Sabha, Home Minister Rajnath Singh acknowledg­ed the widespread anger among people at the March 20 Supreme Court order, which made them take to the streets on Monday. At least eight people were killed, including six in Madhya Pradesh, in violence during the ‘Bharat bandh’ on Monday. The home minister said it was not the government that had “diluted” the law. He called rumours that the government could end reservatio­ns “false and baseless”. According to a PTI report from Jaipur, the houses of a sitting and a former legislator, both Dalits, were set on fire by a mob in Rajasthan's Hindaun. Soon, curfew was imposed in the area, a senior official said.

In Madhya Pradesh, one more person succumbed to injuries suffered during Monday’s protests. Congress President Rahul Gandhi blamed the BJP and BJP President Amit Shah the Congress for not doing enough for the Dalits.

The Supreme Court said the interim relief provided to the victims of atrocities, under the law, must be given immediatel­y without waiting for the filing of a first informatio­n report. The law was amended recently to provide monetary and other kinds of relief to SC and ST victims, in accordance with the offence and their status.

The Bench of Justice AK Go el and Justice U UL al it, which passed the order on March 20, said its anxiety was only to protect innocents from prosecutio­n. The judges said the liberty of innocent people must be protected as much as that of the SCs and STs. Though review petitions are not heard in open court, this petition was heard at a special sitting, as ordered by the Chief Justice. Attorney General K K Venugopal pressed for the review of the judgment in view of public reactions. The court had read down certain provisions of the SC/ST Atrocities Act as it felt that the law was being misused. During the hearing, the judges observed that those who were agitating against the judgment had “either not read the judgment or have been misled by others”. The judges insisted that no innocent person should be jailed before a preliminar­y inquiry. Unlike in other offences, where there is an inquiry before an arrest, this law provides for no forum to verify the allegation­s.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Protestors during a strike in Ghaziabad
PHOTO: PTI Protestors during a strike in Ghaziabad

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