Millennium Post

SC lifts absolute ban on rallies, dharnas at Jantar Mantar, Boat Club

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

The Supreme Court on Monday lifted a blanket ban on rallies, dharnas or sit-ins at the Jantar Mantar and Boat Club areas here, saying there could not be an “absolute” ban on protests in such localities.

The top court also asked the Centre to frame guidelines within two months for according sanctions to such events.

A bench of justices A K Sikri and Ashok Bhushan said, “There is a need to strike a balance between conflictin­g rights such as the right to protest and the right of citizens to live peacefully.”

“There cannot be a complete or absolute ban on holding protests at places like Jantar Mantar and Boat Club (near India Gate),” the bench added while directing the Centre to frame guidelines on the matter.

The verdict came on a batch of petitions, including one filed by the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan, an NGO, challengin­g the decision of the National Green Tribunal (NGT) to ban all kinds of protests at the said places.

The top court had earlier observed, “When, during elections, politician­s can go among the public to seek votes, why can’t people come near their offices after the polls to protest.”

Advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the NGO and other petitioner­s, had contended that the Centre had banned protests or assembly of people in the whole of central Delhi entirely and imposed section 144, CRPC permanentl­y in the guise of avoiding traffic obstructio­n.

Earlier, the Centre had justified the continuous imposition of prohibitor­y orders under section 144, CRPC in central Delhi, which houses most of the government offices and VIP residences.

The Centre’s counsel had told the apex court that this was an era of “profession­al protesters”, who liked to protest outside Parliament or the president’s or prime minister’s house to make their voices heard.

He had added that the government had to take holistic steps while dealing with such protests, rallies and dharnas to ensure that peace and harmony prevailed in an area.

The Centre, while justifying the permanent imposition of prohibitor­y orders in its affidavit, had referred to over a dozen instances when protests had turned violent and the police had to use teargas shells and water cannons to control the mobs at the Jantar Mantar and Boat Club areas.

The plea moved by the NGO had challenged the complete ban on assemblies and protests in the central and New Delhi areas imposed by the NGT.

The NGT had, on October 5 last year, banned all protests and dharnas around the historic Jantar Mantar here, which had been a hotspot of many agitations over the past decades, saying such activities violated environmen­tal laws.

The green panel had said the State had failed entirely to protect the right of a citizen to enjoy a pollution-free environmen­t at the Jantar Mantar Road area, which was located close to Connaught Place at the heart of the national capital.

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