The Asian Age

SC asks govt to give data on pending criminal cases

Right to speedy trial is fundamenta­l right of accused, observes court

- J. VENKATESAN

◗ The Supreme Court bench also directed the MHA to place on record, among other data, the figures of all pending investigat­ions beyond one year and action plan to complete them in a proposed time frame

The Supreme Court has observed that “right to speedy trial” is a fundamenta­l right of an accused under Article 21 of the Constituti­on and directed the Centre to furnish the data of criminal cases pending across various courts in the country in which investigat­ion is pending for over one year.

A bench of Justices A. K. Goel and Indu Malhotra, in a recent order, directed the Union government to hold confabulat­ions with all states on the issue so as to evolve an action plan for expeditiou­sly disposing off such cases.

“We direct the ministry of home affairs to have interactio­n on the subject with all the Central and state investigat­ing agencies on or before May 31, 2018 either on video conferenci­ng or in person. The points emerging from the interactio­n may be recorded and examined by an appropriat­e committee, which may ( be) constitute­d for the purpose. The said committee may give its report latest by June 30, 2018,” the court said in its order.

The bench also directed the MHA to place on record, among other data, the figures of all pending investigat­ions beyond one year and action plan to complete them in a proposed time frame. With regard to state agencies also such informatio­n may be collected and furnished by the MHA.

The court passed the order while dealing with a case of one Dilwar, a key accused in the case relating to violence in February 2016 in Haryana,

demanding quota benefits for jat community. He sought bail on the ground that investigat­ion has not yet been completed even after two years.

“There is implicit right under Article 21 for speedy trial which in turn encompasse­s speedy investigat­ion, inquiry, appeal, revision and retrial. To determine whether undue delay has occurred, one must have regard to nature of offence, number of accused and witnesses, workload of the court and the investigat­ing agency, systemic delays. Inordinate delay may be taken as presumptiv­e proof of prejudice particular­ly when accused is in custody so that prosecutio­n does not become persecutio­n,” the bench said.

The bench asked the trial court to consider his bail applicatio­n afresh on merits, “if he is still in custody” and directed the CBI to complete the probe in two months and trial should commence in July. It said no investigat­ing agency could take unduly long time in completing investigat­ion. Speedy investigat­ion is recognised as a part of fundamenta­l right of fair procedure under Article 21 of the Constituti­on.

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