Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Courts don’t have a remedy for all ills plaguing the country: SC

- Satya Prakash

NEW DELHI: Amid rising concern over judicial activism and overreach in India, the Supreme Court has said judiciary doesn’t have a remedy for all ills confrontin­g the country and policy matters are better left to the government.

A bench of Chief Justice of India TS Thakur and j ustice DY Chandrachu­d -- which dismissed a petition seeking direction to government for moral education in schools – said courts didn’t have competence to deal with it.

“It is unrealisti­c for the court to assume that it can provide solutions to vexed issues which involve drawing balances between conflictin­g dimensions that travel beyond the legal plane. Courts are concerned with issues of constituti­onality and legality,” the bench said.

“The (writ) jurisdicti­on of this Court under Article 32 is not a panacea for all ills but a remedy for the violation of fundamenta­l rights,” it said, adding: “Every good that is perceived to be in the interest of society cannot be mandated by the court. Nor is the judicial process an answer to every social ill which a public interest petitioner perceives.”

The verdict may be perceived as a step towards course correction as the higher judiciary, particular­ly the SC, has often been New Delhi: Tasked with reviewing the laws regulating the legal profession in India, the Law Commission has asked various bar bodies for suggestion­s on the issue in the next one month.

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court had asked the law panel to review “all relevant aspects” relating to the law governing the legal profession in consultati­on with all stakeholde­rs. “Legal profession being the most important component of justice

accused of encroachin­g upon the spheres reserved for the legislatur­e and the executive. “While there can be no dispute about the need of providing value based education, what form this should take and the manner in which values should be inculcated ought not to be ordained by the

court,” the bench said.

Noting that morality was just one element in the compositio­n of values that a just society must pursue, the court said there was a need to promote acceptance of plurality and diversity of ideas, images and faiths which faced global threats.

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