The Asian Age

Be sensitive on Rohingya issue, SC tells govt

- J. VENKATESAN

The Supreme Court on Friday stopped short of restrainin­g the government till next month from deporting nearly 40,000 Rohingyas who have taken refuge in the country and instead asked the Centre to be sensitive and adopt a multi- pronged approach to tackle the humanitari­an issue.

The Centre must play a big role and strike a balance between human rights and national security interests, it said.

“It is a large issue. A issue of great magnitude. Therefore, the state has a big role. The role of the state in such a situation has to be multi- pronged,” said a three- judge bench, headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra.

The CJI said, “It is a humanitari­an issue. We also have to see the competing interests of national interest, economic interest, labour interest, demographi­c considerat­ions and also the protection of women, children, sick and the infirm. You can take action against a terrorist, but innocents should not suffer.”

The court can’t be oblivious to the plight of innocent kids and women, the CJI added.

The bench, which also included Justices A. M. Kanwilkar and D. Y. Chandrachu­d, wanted to pass an order that Rohingya Muslims should not be deported till its final decision on November 21, but additional solicitor general Tushar Mehta persuaded the court not to pass such an order, as it will

Continued from Page 1 have wide internatio­nal ramificati­ons.

Senior counsel Fali Nariman, appearing for petitioner migrants, sought to make an urgent “mention” before the judges if any contingenc­y of deportatio­n arose.

When the ASG said so far the contingenc­y had not arisen, the CJI observed, “We understand that you ( Centre) may not want an order from us. But you also do not give any room for such a contingenc­y.”

The bench reordered the submission of Mr Nariman and granted him the liberty to mention the matter, in case a need arose. The CJI asked the government to strike a balance between human rights and national security while dealing with migrants.

Referring to the Centre’s stand that the matter was not justiciabl­e as it was a policy matter, the CJI told the ASG that “our constituti­onal ethos makes us lean sympatheti­cally towards humanitari­an issue”.

“We are not going to be

Around 40,000 Rohingyas have settled in Jammu, Hyderabad, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi- NCR and Rajasthan

swayed by emotions. We will strictly go by the law. We will not permit any emotional arguments. We are treating the issue holistical­ly and we are thinking how to strike a balance,” the court said.

Mr Nariman rejected the Centre’s stand that the issue is not justiciabl­e and took exception to the government trying to paint all Rohingyas as terrorists and opposed any en mass deportatio­n.

Around 40,000 Rohingyas, who fled to India after violence in Myanmar, have settled in Jammu, Hyderabad, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi- NCR and Rajasthan.

The Union home ministry had recently directed all state government­s to set up task forces to identify all illegally- staying foreign nationals.

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