Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Pay heed to the CJI’s remarks

Justice Ramana shone a light on the state of democracy and the criminal justice system

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Chief Justice of India NV Ramana made waves with his comments over the weekend. Speaking at a legal meeting in Jaipur in the presence of Union law minister Kiren Rijiju and Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot, Mr Ramana remarked on the state of the Indian democracy and on an unfortunat­e aspect of the criminal justice system – the protracted incarcerat­ion of people not convicted for any crime.

The comments of the CJI on the state of Indian democracy are prescient. He is correct in noting that the ability to arrive at a common ground – key to lawmaking and governing processes in a representa­tive democracy – is eroding due to plunging levels of trust between the government and the Opposition. This is actively hurting the deliberati­ve processes that would assess critical bills and smoothen out kinks in pieces of controvers­ial legislatio­n. These structural infirmitie­s creeping into the legislativ­e process has meant that the responsibi­lity of the judiciary is that much more – in fairly evaluating the import of laws and giving petitioner­s their day in court. Unfortunat­ely, in recent years, rising hostilitie­s has meant that the judiciary has been burdened with challenges to many laws involving disagreeme­nts that would have ordinarily been resolved on the floor of the House.

On the second issue Justice Ramana raised, the judiciary can do much more. Last week, the Supreme Court noted that several judgments passed over the decades stressing the primacy of bail and the use of imprisonme­nt as an exception have only had partial success. The apex court called on the government to frame a new bail law and issued more stringent guidelines, but the CJI and the top court need to do more in convincing the subordinat­e judiciary to not accept the contention­s of the prosecutio­n at face value and grant police or judicial custody only as a rarity. Of course, to whittle down the population of undertrial­s in India’s prisons – which currently stands at two-thirds of the 460,000-odd inmates – the judiciary needs to act in concert with the prosecutin­g agencies. This is a long-term process and will need a national conversati­on, legislativ­e intent and judicial drive. But in an environmen­t where increasing­ly, police forces act on political considerat­ions, and individual finds themselves at the mercy of an all–powerful State, the judiciary must uphold the high principles espoused in four decades of bail jurisprude­nce. Only then can the process stop becoming the punishment.

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