Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Adieu Soli Sorabjee, jurist, legal luminary, and jazz aficionado

- Utkarsh Anand and Dhamini Ratnam letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Soli Sorabjee, 91, former attorney general of India, a staunch proponent of freedom of speech, and an eminent lawyer associated with a series of landmark judgments, died on Friday at a hospital in New Delhi.

Sorabjee famously joined jurist Nani Palkhivala and veteran lawyer Fali S Nariman to fight the 1973 Keshavanan­d Bharti case in the Supreme Court that eventually led to the legal doctrine of “basic structure” of the Constituti­on. It was the only time a bench of 13 judges, the full strength of the apex court at that time, sat to decide a case. It was the longest heard case before the court -- 69 days from October 31, 1972, to March 23, 1973. The Bharati judgement, by a majority of 7:6, said amendments should not alter the “basic structure” of the Constituti­on, and has become the bedrock of Indian constituti­onal law.

Sorabjee was the petitioner’s lawyer in the landmark SR Bommai case, which resulted in the Supreme Court’s 1994 verdict that held the power of the President to dismiss a state government is not absolute and subject to judicial review. He was also involved in the Prakash Singh case in which the top court directed the Centre to appoint the National Police Commission and paved the way for significan­t police reforms.

In the 1984 anti-sikh riots cases, Sorabjee worked with Citizen’s Justice Committee and took up cases pro bono for the victims.

He was decorated with India’s second highest civilian honour, the Padma Vibhushan, in 2002.

Jazz, his first love

But jazz, as Sorabjee would often say, was his first love.

Sorabjee also began to take clarinet lessons from famous jazz musician Hal Green, and performed at amateur concerts. During the war years, he and a group of boys from his school, St Xavier’s High School at Dhobi Talao, would tune into Radio SEAC that would host jazz music shows. This group started what was the country’s first jazz magazine, Blue Rhythm, in 1952 (the magazine lasted a year).

 ?? AJIT KUMAR/ HT ARCHIVE ?? A 1986 portrait of Soli Sorabjee.
AJIT KUMAR/ HT ARCHIVE A 1986 portrait of Soli Sorabjee.

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