Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

TOP COURT SHOULD HAVE BARRED CRIMINALS FROM POLLS: EXCECS

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: Activists and former election commission­ers expressed their disappoint­ment at the Supreme Court for not passing an order barring politician­s facing criminal charges from contesting polls or not ordering political parties themselves to do so, detailing just who should be barred.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court said it was up to Parliament to pass a law to ensure those facing criminal charges do not enter politics. The court did ask for adequate disclosure of these charges, but the activists and former election officials would have liked more.

The poll panel had earlier written to the law ministry that those facing criminal charges, framed by a competent magistrate at least six months before the scheduled date of an election (and which, if proven, entail a minimum punishment of five years) should be disqualifi­ed from contesting elections.

There are currently no such restrictio­ns on contesting polls. Only those convicted cannot, for a period of six years. Former chief election commission­er TS Krishnamur­thy said the court should have given a direction to political parties to frame the law, specifying who should be barred [from electoral politics].

“I am not sure whether the parties will carry out this direction (to frame laws) without diluting it. If the parties are required only to furnish informatio­n about criminal cases, that is not enough,” he said.

Another former CEC, SY Quraishi, also said the SC should not have left it to the politician­s to draft the law. “This [order] is disappoint­ing but not surprising. We have been trying to get the government to pass the law for decades, but have failed. The SC was our only hope, as it has been the guarding angel of democracy and elections,” he said.

On the issue of the apex court asking candidates to make public the criminal cases pending against them, Quraishi said that informatio­n has been furnished since 2002 in the affidavits that candidates file before the election commission.

Former CEC HS Brahma however said it was acceptable to let Parliament initiate necessary amendment in the Representa­tion of People’s Act. “…so that ECI could initiate necessary action to check the entry of criminals into politics,” he said.

This (order) is disappoint­ing... We have been trying to get the government to pass the law for decades... The SC was our only hope...

SY QURAISHI, former chief election commission­er

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