Bangkok Post

VP rejects impeachmen­t of top judge

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NEW DELHI: India’s vice president yesterday rejected an unpreceden­ted petition by seven opposition parties to impeach the top judge for “misbehavio­ur”, saying that the allegation­s were “neither tenable nor admissible”.

The decision of Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu, who chairs the upper house of parliament, was a relief for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, which had called it a “revenge petition” in response to a reprieve the ruling party’s chief won from the Supreme Court in another case.

The petition to impeach Chief Justice Dipak Misra for “acts of misbehavio­ur” and misuse of authority was signed by 64 serving members of the upper house. It had also accused him of arbitraril­y using his power to allot sensitive cases and questioned his conduct in the acquisitio­n of land.

“The allegation­s emerging from the present case have a serious tendency of underminin­g the independen­ce of judiciary which is the basic tenet of the Constituti­on of India,” Mr Naidu said in a signed order shared with journalist­s.

“Considerin­g the totality of facts, I am of the firm opinion that it is neither legal nor desirable or proper to admit the notice of motion on any of these grounds.”

Mr Misra came under a cloud in January when the four next highest-ranking judges in the Supreme Court criticised his distributi­on of cases and raised concerns about judicial appointmen­ts.

Mr Misra was appointed last August and is due to retire in October. His office has said he would not comment on the impeachmen­t motion.

The Congress party said it was not surprised by the ruling of Mr Naidu, a former minister under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party has accused the opposition of trying to use the impeachmen­t move as a political tool.

A supreme court judge can only be removed from office if enough votes in the house of parliament support the notion, a rare occurence.

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