Hindustan Times (Patiala)

The importance of fundamenta­l rights

- GAUTAM BHATIA

Two imperative s shaped India’ s freedom struggle. The first was liberation from oppressive colonial rule. The British government was autocratic and repressive, treated Indians as subjects to be ruled rather than equal participan­ts in government, and frequently resorted governing by arbitrary fiat rather than by the rule of law. In response, Indian articulate­d a vocabulary of civil rights — the freedom of speech, associatio­n, and assembly( among others )— that would allow them to express their aspiration­s, engage in political and cultural dissent, and create a public sphere that would form the basis of self-government.

At the same time, Indians knew they had to look within. The alien regime was not the only repressive institutio­n that existed among them. The twin axes of ca ste and gender( for example) served to place millions of future citizens in positions of perpetual sub ordination, exploitati­on, and exclusion. This subordinat­ion, however, also had along history of resistance. From Jo ti ba Phu le in the late-19th century to BRA mb ed karin the 1920s, a vocabulary of freedom, equality, and access to public spaces was articulate­d against the specific kind of oppression visited on people by social and cultural institutio­ns.

At the time of the framing of the Indianfor the future society that we aspired to become and a blue print of the nation whose borders were soon to come into existence —both these imperative­s came together to Fundamenta­l Rights Chapter, which still remains the beating heart of the Constituti­on. Drawing upon various constituti­onal documents that had been written and debated in the run-up to 1947, the framers set out a detailed charter of fundamenta­l rights. The core philosophy underlying this charter was explained by Am bed karin his last speech to the Constituen­t Assembly. Highlighti­ng the trinity of liberty, equality, and fraternity that framed the chapter, Am bedkar observed that “liberty cannot be divorced from equality, equality cannot be divorced from liberty. Nor can liberty and equality be divorced from fraternity. Without equality, liberty would produce the supremacy of the few over the many. Equality without liberty would kill individual­fraternity, liberty would produce the supremacy of the few over the many. Without fraternity, liberty and equality could not become a natural course of things. It would require a constable to enforce them.”

Liberty, therefore, referred to that zone of freedom guaranteed to the individual, where the State’ s powers of interferen­ce were limited or restricted altogether. In our Constituti­on, this liberty is secured by the guarantee of core civil rights, such as the rights to free speech, associatio­n, life, personal liberty, and so on. Next, there was equality. As Am bedk ar understood, equality was not simply about a guarantee of formal equal treatment( which would only end up entrenchin­g the “supremacy of the few over the many ”), but about identifyin­g the bases on which individual­s and groups had been historical­lydiscrimi­nated against, and to work to remedy that discrimina­tion in the present day. Thus, in the Constituti­on, we have provisions not only for equal treatment (Article 14) and non-discrimina­tion( Article 15), but also specific enabling provisions for measures like reservatio­n( Article 16), which were never viewed as antithetic­al to equality, but rather, an integral part of it.

As Am bedk ar real is ed, however, liberty and equality would remain meaning less if they were directed only against the State. The concept of “fraternity” was the bridge between liberty and equality, ensuring that those principles would operate not merely in the “public sphere”, but also — in some respects — in the private sphere. Uniquely for its time, therefore, the Indian Constituti­on enshrined what we know as“horizontal rights”—i.e ., rights between private parties. These included Article 15(2)( guaranteei­ng non discrimina­tory access to certain public spaces such as shops), Article 17 (prohibitin­g “untouchabi­lity”), and Article 23 (prohibitin­g “forced labour”). The Constituti­on, thus, intended a deeper democratis­ation of Indian public and social life, and envisaged that this would be accomplish­ed through the Constituti­on’s fundamenta­l rights chapter.

Of course, this is not the only part of the story. Perhaps swayed by the violence of Partition — that was going on even as the Constituti­on was being drafted — the framers ended up hedging in the rights they were granting, with a series of “reasonable restrictio­ns.” There was staunch opposition to this from within the Constituen­t Assembly — an opposition that reached a fever pitch when it was discovered that there was a proposal to en shrine preventive detention into the Constituti­on itself. Ultimately, however, these restrictio­ns passed scrutiny and were included into the Constituti­on. The recent — and repressive — use of a number of laws, however, suggests that the framers may have allowed themselves to get caught up too much in their own time, and failed to provide adequate fundamenta­l rights safeguards for the future.

These few design flaws, however, do not away from the importance of the fundamenta­l rights chapter, and its role in ensuring that India’s Constituti­on is, at the end of the day, a trans format ive Constituti­on: it trans forms subjectsto citizens, and brings ideas of freedom and equality into spaces they would otherwise never come. The task of future generation is to defend that precious heritage.

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