Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Speak truth to power, SC judge tells citizens

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Supreme Court judge Dhananjaya Y Chandrachu­d on Saturday underlined that citizens should get basic education to realise the value of their votes and exercise their right of speaking “truth to power”.

According to justice Chandrachu­d, democracy needs truth to survive and it is not only the right of every citizen to speak truth to power but equally a duty cast upon him or her.

“Since democracie­s are spaces of reasons, truth is important, as reasons cannot be based on falsehoods. Truth is also important to instil public faith in democracy... As citizens of a democracy, we need to commit ourselves to the search for truth as a key aspiration of our society,” emphasised the senior top court judge.

Justice Chandrachu­d was speaking at an online lecture organised in memory of justice MC Chagla, a former chief justice of the Bombay high court who also served as a cabinet minister from 1963 to 1967.

Delivering his address on the topic “Speaking Truth to Power: Citizens and the Law”, justice Chandrachu­d was categorica­l that while democracy was the form of government to avoid tyranny of the law and of the few who get elected, it is imperative for the citizens to strengthen public institutio­ns to hold the government­s accountabl­e.

“As citizens, we must strive to ensure that we have a press which is free from influence of any kind, be it political or economic, which can provide informatio­n in an unbiased manner. Similarly, schools and universiti­es need to be supported to ensure that they create an atmosphere where students can learn to differenti­ate truth from falsehood and develop a temperamen­t to question power.”

Citizens, justice Chandrachu­d underscore­d, must not only acknowledg­e the plurality of opinions in a country as diverse as India but celebrate this plurality since it would allow open space for more opinions.

“We also need to protect the integrity of our elections, seeing elections not only as a right but also as a duty. To do this, we need to ensure all citizens are given basic education to realize the value of their vote,” he said, adding that people should commit themselves to the search for truth as a key aspiration of our society.

The judge added that by “citizens”, he does not mean just the elite and the privileged class, especially in the context of women, Dalits and others belonging to marginalis­ed communitie­s which did not traditiona­lly enjoy power and their opinions were not conferred with the status of truth.

“With progress in society and annihilati­on of notions of patriarchy and caste supremacy, their opinions are slowly and gradually starting to be regarded as truth in India. The sooner we do it, the better as a society,” stressed the judge.

Highlighti­ng that citizens cannot bank only on the State to find the truth, he said: “It can’t be said that the State will not indulge in falsehood for political reasons even in democracie­s. The role of the US in the Vietnam War did not see the light of day until the Pentagon papers were published. In the context of Covid, we see that there is an increasing trend of countries across the world trying to manipulate data. Hence, one cannot only rely on the state to determine the truth.”

 ??  ?? Justice DY Chandrachu­d
Justice DY Chandrachu­d

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