Deccan Chronicle

HC judge in Tablighi case disagrees with his colleague on anti-CAA stir

THE bench had said accused were made ‘scapegoats’ and baseless allegation­s were leveled against them.

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Mumbai, Aug 28: Justice M.G. Sewlikar of the Bombay High Court, who was part of a bench that quashed cases against foreign nationals who had attended the Tablighi Jamaat event in Delhi, said on Friday that he disagreed with certain observatio­ns in the ruling. He did not agree with remarks made by his colleague, Justice T.V. Nalavade, about action taken against members of the Muslim community over protests against the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizens (NRC), he said.

A division bench of Justices Nalavade and Sewlikar — part of the

Aurangabad bench of the HC — had on August 21 quashed FIRs filed against 29 foreigners, who had attended the event in Delhi in March this year, for allegedly violating visa conditions.

The bench had said the accused were made “scapegoats” and baseless allegation­s were leveled that they were responsibl­e for spreading Coronaviru­s in the country. It said that the state government acted under “political compulsion”, and there was a big propaganda against the foreigners who attended the Tablighi gathering.

“A political government tries to find the scapegoat when there is a pandemic or calamity and the circumstan­ces show that there is probabilit­y that these foreigners were chosen to make them a scapegoat,” the court had said.

However, Justice Sewlikar had stated on August 21 that while he agreed with the operative part of the order (quashing of FIRs), he did not agree with Justice Nalavade on few of the observatio­ns, and would pass a separate order. On Friday, Justice Sewlikar issued a four-page order saying he did not agree with the remarks made by Justice Nalavade. “I find it difficult to concur with the observatio­ns (on CAA and NRC) as allegation­s in this respect are not made in the petitions nor there is any evidence in this regard. Therefore, in my opinion these observatio­ns are outside the scope of the petitions,” Justice Sewlikar said.

Justice Nalavade in his order had said that there were largescale protests across the country by members of the Muslim community against CAA and NRC as they believed that citizenshi­p would not be given to Muslim refugees and migrants.

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