Millennium Post

SC 2019 imprints: Paving way for Ram Temple, Rafale; clean chit to EX-CJI in harassment claim

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NEW DELHI: Verdicts paving the way for constructi­on of a Ram Temple at Ayodhya and India's multi-billion dollar Rafale fighter jet deal with France were 2019's landmark imprints of the Supreme Court, which also found itself at the centre of a controvers­y with then Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi being accused of sexual harassment before getting the clean chit.

Controvers­ies around former CJIS notwithsta­nding, Justice (retd) Gogoi was the first head of the judiciary against whom a stunning claim of sexual harassment was made by a former apex court employee.

The controvers­y was put to rest following a clean chit to him by the Supreme Court's In-house Inquiry Committee, headed by present CJI S A Bobde who took charge as head of judiciary this year.

The top court also saw a spate of pleas against the Centre's historical move abrogating the provisions of Article 370, which gave special status to Jammu and Kashmir, and subsequent restrictio­ns and detention of leaders like Farooq Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti.

A 5-judge Constituti­on bench has been set up to examine the validity of the Centre's move bifurcatin­g the J&K in two Union Territorie­s. The year would however be remembered for the historic verdict on the centuries old Ram Janmabhoom­ibabri Masjid land dispute at Ayodhya.

A failed mediation put the onus on the top court to resolve the issue. A 5-judge bench, headed by the then CJI Gogoi, heard the parties involved for 40 days -- second longest hearing in its history -- and unanimousl­y cleared the way for constructi­on of temple at the disputed site and directed the Centre to allot a 5-acre plot to Muslims for a mosque.

The apex court widened the scope of judicial scrutiny into alleged discrimina­tion against women in various religions by referring to a 7-judge bench the pleas seeking review of its historic 2018 verdict allowing women and girls of all ages to enter Kerala's Sabarimala temple.

It said that a larger bench should frame parameters to deal with alleged discrimina­tion against Muslim and Parsi women -- entry of Muslim women into mosques and 'dargah' as also Parsi women, married to non-parsi men, being barred from the holy fire place of an Agyari.

The politicall­y-sensitive Rafale jet case, which kept the Modi government on tenterhook­s, ended in favour of the Centre with the apex court upholding its last year's decision and dismissing various review pleas for a CBI probe into inter-government­al Indiafranc­e pact to procure 36 fully loaded fighter jets from Dassault Aviation.

The year also saw the top court shed its reluctance on sharing informatio­n under the Right to Informatio­n Act, with a path-breaking verdict holding that the CJI'S office is a public authority under transparen­cy law and amenable to disclosure.

It however put caveats saying that "judicial independen­ce" and nature of informatio­n has to be kept in mind while disclosing informatio­n in "public interest".

Pleas related to nationwide protests against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act 2019, which aims to provide citizenshi­p to persecuted minorities of Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanista­n, also engaged the top court which referred the issues of alleged police atrocities on protestors to the concerned high courts.

It decided however to examine the constituti­onal validity of CAA by issuing notice to the Centre on 59 pleas filed by various parties, including Congress leader Jairam Ramesh and Indian Union Muslim League. Besides, it monitored the exercise of finalisati­on of Assam NRC in which 19,06,657 of the total 3,30,27,661 applicants were excluded.

The year also saw the Supreme Court take tough stand against rising sexual offences against women and children. It upheld the death sentence of one of the four convicts in the 2012 Nirbhaya gang rape and murder case and came up with guidelines for setting up special courts in each district with over 100 FIRS to deal with POCSO cases. Politicall­y influentia­l persons including expelled BJP MLA Kuldeep Singh Sengar and former Union minister Swami Chinmayana­nd, accused of sexual offences, found themselves at the receiving end.

It transferre­d the Unnao rape case involving Sengar from a Lucknow court to Delhi's trial court which sentenced him to life term till last breath.

It took suo motu (on its own) cognizance on assessment of the criminal justice system in response to sexual offences, saying that despite amendments to law for effective and speedy trials, the NCRB'S 2017 data showed 32,559 rape cases being registered in India.

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