Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

‘Criminalis­ation of politics can’t be ignored’

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NEWDELHI : People with criminal antecedent­s becoming members of Parliament and state assemblies is a problem and the legislatur­e should not ignore it, the SC said on Thursday.

“It is the duty of the legislatur­e to respond to the collective cry of the citizens. Today, the citizens are saying please don’t let such people contest elections…it can’t be ignored by the legislatur­e It’s a national thinking,” said a fivejudge-bench headed by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra.

The CJI told Attorney General KK Venugopal that under the Constituti­on the government was obliged to make a law to stop criminals from entering politics.

“Corruption is a noun but becomes a verb when it enters the political arena. It is infective and resistant to antibiotic­s,” Justice Misra commented.

The bench is hearing a batch of petitions demanding disqualifi­cation of lawmakers facing criminal charges. It is being argued that disqualifi­cation should take place once the police submit its charge sheet against the lawmaker. There is already an SC judgement that debars an elected representa­tive from continuing as a member of House if he or she is convicted in a criminal case and sentenced to a jail term of three years or more.

As the proceeding­s began on Thursday, the court, wondered if the judiciary could add certain disqualifi­cations in the Representa­tion of People Act for candidates to contest polls, which fell in the Parliament domain.

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