Hindustan Times (Noida)

HC: Rohini ashram inmates indoctrina­ted, left trapped

- Richa Banka richa.banka@htlive.com

THE HIGH COURT ASKED THE DELHI GOVERNMENT TO CONSIDER TAKING OVER THE MANAGEMENT OF THE ASHRAM

NEW DELHI: Terming as “shocking” the state of affairs at a Rohini ashram housing several women, the Delhi high court on Thursday said that the inmates were indoctrina­ted which is evident in the “animal-like conditions” they were kept in at the ashram.

The court also asked the Delhi government to consider taking over the management of the ashram, adding that though it cannot force the inmates to move out of the ashram, it can’t allow continuati­on of the “inhuman” conditions prevalent in the facility.

“There is a very thorough indoctrina­tion. How can we accept that any sane person can live in these conditions…these women are in a trap, though they may say that they are there out of their own free will, [how] can we just follow that and accept and shut our eyes to it. This man is absconding, he is by proxy continuing to defend this litigation,” said a bench of acting chief justice Vipin Sanghi and justice Navin Chawla, referring to self-styled spiritual guru Virender Dev Dixit, who is currently on the run.

Expressing extreme displeasur­e on the management of the ashram, the court said that prima facie the institute is functionin­g in violation of the Women’s and Children’s Institutio­ns (Licensing) Act, 1956.

The court said that it appeared as if the institute is not complying with the provisions of the Act which allows a superinten­dent or any other person in-charge of the institutio­n to meet the inmates, hear their complaints, and see that each inmate is provided with proper food, clothing, bedding and other such amenities that she may be entitled to.

Noting that even the toilets don’t have doors, the court remarked, “…And this is going on in the Capital, it’s shocking. This has to be set right. This institutio­n needs to be taken over by you…”

The bench asked Delhi government standing counsel Santosh Kumar Tripathi to consider taking over the institutio­n: “…The reports of IHBAS and AIIMS show that all the inmates were parroting the same fact which only shows intoxicati­on. Therefore, in this situation, when the so called ‘Baba’ is absconding and there are rape cases... where is the question of this ashram functionin­g on its own”.

“If these inmates say that they are out of free will and want to live there, so be it, but the management should be with the government… It does not mean that the institutio­n will be run in a covert way. Instructio­ns should be taken over by the government,” the court added.

When the counsel for the ashram argued that the government takeover would violate their rights under Article 25 and 26 of the Constituti­on, the court said, “We are clear in our mind that no minority institutio­n gets a licence only by being such an institutio­n to conduct its affairs so as to violate the fundamenta­l rights of an individual, particular­ly the right to life and personal liberty guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constituti­on of India.”

The court also said that it falls on the State to ensure that infraction of rights is prevented. “We are not, for a moment, suggesting that the respondent institutio­n and its inmates should not profess their religious and spiritual beliefs. They are free to do that so long as they do not contravene any law or constituti­onal provision,” said the court.

It clarified that even after the takeover, the freedom of the inmates to exercise their religious and spiritual rights will not be impacted.

In December 2017, on a petition by NGO Foundation for Social Empowermen­t through its founder Seema Sharma, the high court had asked the CBI to trace Dixit after raising doubts over claims that women inmates were not illegally confined in the ashram.

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