Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Pioneer of PIL, judicial activism, ex-CJI PN Bhagwati passes away

- Ashok Bagriya

NEW DELHI: The father of public interest litigation (PIL) and judicial activism in Indian legal jurisprude­nce, justice PN Bhagwati is no more.

The 17th Chief Justice of India, justice Bhagwati passed away in New Delhi on Thursday evening after a brief illness. He was 95, and is survived by his wife and three daughters.

Justice Bhagwati began his career as an advocate in the Bombay high court. He became a judge of the Gujarat high court in 1960 and was subsequent­ly elevated to the Supreme court in 1973.

Justice Bhagwati is considered one of the most distinguis­hed jurists of India since independen­ce. He presided over the Supreme Court as its Chief Justice until his retirement in 1985. Under his leadership, the apex court developed comprehens­ive human rights jurisprude­nce. He retired as the Chief Justice in 1985.

During his stint in the Supreme Court, justice Bhagwati was responsibl­e for making a large number of innovation­s with a view to providing access to justice to the poor and disadvanta­ged. He enlarged the doctrine of locus standi before the Supreme Court and the high courts for vindicatin­g the individual and collective rights of those denied access to justice on account of poverty or social or economic disability.

Justice Bhagwati developed the strategy of PILs with a view to making human rights meaningful for the large masses of poor and disadvanta­ged people. He introduced the system of taking cognisance of letters that were written by social workers, journalist­s, law teachers and civil liberty activists directly to him. This strategy won admiration in many common law jurisdicti­ons.

Justice Bhagwati is widely regarded as the originator of India’s legal aid programme.

But his flawless tenure as judge was marred by a black spot, the controvers­ial judgment in the ADM Jabalpur case (popularly referred to as the habeas corpus case) where he decreed that during Emergency, the fundamenta­l rights of citizens can be suspended. LONDON:Britain’s Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS) has rejected the claim that the Indian government or its extraditio­n request was criticised by the judge during Tuesday’s hearing on the extraditio­n of controvers­ial Indian businessma­n Vijay Mallya.

TheBritain’s Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS) acts on behalf of a country requesting extraditio­n in proceeding­s in British courts. Mallya’s case is being heard in the Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court by chief magistrate Emma Arbuthnot.

CPS sources told Hindustan Times on Thursday the case was “large and complex” and the amount gathered by the Indian police and the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) was “substantia­l”.

The material, they said, needed to be reviewed by the CPS’ Extraditio­n Team and

 ??  ?? Justice Bhagwati
Justice Bhagwati

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