FrontLine

Champion of civil liberties

- BY LYLA BAVADAM

Justice (retired) P.B. Sawant (1930-2021) will be remembered for his deep involvemen­t in social activism, his unfalterin­g position on civil and human rights, and his anti-communal and anti-caste standpoint­s.

RETIRED Supreme Court Justice P. B. Sawant died at his home in Pune on February 15 at the age of 91. He will be deeply missed by those who hold social justice and civil liberties in the highest regard.

Born on June 30, 1930, Justice Sawant began his profession­al career as a lawyer in the High Court of Bombay, practising all branches of the law. In 1973, he was appointed a judge of the High Court of Bombay. From 1989 to 1995, he served as a judge of the Supreme Court of India. He was also the Governor’s nominee for the selection of Vice-chancellor of Shivaji University in 1986, on the Staff Selection Committee of the Bombay University from 1986 to 1987 and in the Senate of the Pune University in 1987.

He was one of the three retired judges appointed to the Indian People’s Tribunal, an independen­t investigat­ion agency set up in 2002 to look into the post-godhra violence in Gujarat. The report strongly castigated Narendra Modi, the then Chief Minister of Gujarat.

Justice Sawant also headed a Commission of Inquiry appointed by the Maharashtr­a government in 2003 to investigat­e the charges of corruption levelled against four Ministers by anti-corruption crusader Anna Hazare. Two Ministers

JUSTICE P.B. SAWANT

resigned after the Commission published its report.

Even as a practising lawyer, Justice Sawant was an office-bearer of, and adviser to, trade unions as well as a few educationa­l institutio­ns. But it was after retirement that he came into his own. His deep involvemen­t in social activism and his unfalterin­g position on civil and human rights and his anti-communal and anti-caste standpoint­s are what he will be remembered for.

ELGAR PARISHAD

His last fight was in the defence of freedom of speech and civil liberties. On December 31, 2017, Justice Sawant, along with Justice (retired) Kolse-patil, organised the Elgar Par

ishad, a meeting of anti-communal activists, in Pune. This was denounced as a meeting of anti-nationals and the participan­ts have since been arrested and hounded. While both judges have repeatedly stated that they were the sole organisers and funders of the meeting, a first informatio­n report (FIR) filed by a Pune businessma­n alleged that the Parishad was the cause of the violence that occurred at Bhima-koregaon on January 1, 2018. Some of the civil rights activists who participat­ed in the Parishad were arrested on the grounds that they belonged to outlawed Maoist groups and were part of a conspiracy to assassinat­e Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Both judges had, at the time, said that the only conspiracy was to silence any criticism of the state. Indeed, the subsequent persecutio­n of the activists has only served to corroborat­e their statement, as has a recent United States-based forensic lab’s report that says that the “evidence” was planted in the laptops of the accused.

While talking to this correspond­ent in October 2019, Justice Sawant said: “…civil liberties are the foundation of democracy and an infringeme­nt even of one of them seriously affects the democratic functionin­g of society. Secondly, civil liberties also consist of inherent and inalienabl­e rights of man. These rights are born with man, and in a democratic society they are the essential accoutreme­nt of the citizen. They are not given by any statute, including the fundamenta­l statute, the Constituti­on, and hence they cannot be taken away by any statute. That is why the right to life is not mentioned in our Constituti­on in specific terms and is assured, while imposing the restrictio­ns on its deprivatio­n in Article 21.”

STAUNCH CRITIC OF THE BJP

A staunch and outspoken critic of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Justice Sawant made no bones about associatin­g the party with the increasing clampdown on civil rights and freedom of speech. He said: “Instances of repression of civil rights have been galore since the Bharatiya Janata Party/modi government came to power in 2014. …. some of these instances [are]… the abrogation of Article 370, including the clampdown on the media; the treatment of the Bhima Koregaon activists; the vindictive­ness against the police officer Sanjiv Bhatt; the… Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act amendment; and the action against [former] Election Commission­er Ashok Lavasa. In addition, mob lynching and the persecutio­n of Dalits and members of religious minority communitie­s have to be strongly emphasised. There are many such instances which are not reported in the media taking place almost every day in all corners of the country. The other prominent instances are the murders of Judge B.H. Loya and Haren Pandya, the Sohrabuddi­n encounter, the Malegaon bomb blast conspiracy where Lieutenant Colonel Prasad Purohit and Sadhvi Pragya Thakur are the accused. It is interestin­g to note that Amit Shah, who was one of the accused in the Sohrabuddi­n encounter case, is the president of the ruling party and now the Home Minister…

“We should not be surprised by these developmen­ts. This government does not accept our Constituti­on and they have, from time to time, made it clear, including in their manifesto, that they want to change the same. They are against democracy, secularism and socialism. Their avowed objective is to establish a dictatorsh­ip, a Hindu Rashtra, in this country and give free rein to the free market economy. In pursuance of this objective, they have already made inroads into key institutio­ns of governance and have even been trying to control the judiciary by various ways, including interferen­ce in judicial appointmen­ts. The media are infiltrate­d by the RSS [Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh] gentry and are also repressed by controllin­g the owners of both print and electronic media. The critics of this regime are trolled, the opposition is sought to be silenced, and even independen­t writers, speakers and social activists are sought to be subdued. Untruth, false propaganda, illusions and manufactur­ed events are being used as weapons for misguiding and fooling the people. These are all the trappings of a fascist regime, to which the country has been treated since the inception of the present regime.”

Justice Sawant linked the suppressio­n of civil liberties with capitalism and corporatoc­racy. He said: “At present only eight families rule the economy of the world. This is the natural culminatio­n of capitalism into monopoly capitalism. These families not only dictate economic politics but also interfere in the political, social and cultural life of every country in order to strengthen their economic hold over the world. In the past, we had imperialis­m which tried to colonise the world by grabbing territorie­s and ruling them. Today we have its new incarnatio­n, economic imperialis­m, which is impercepti­ble but more deadly. There is not a single country where corporatoc­racy does not rule. Hence, peace, the environmen­t and justice are threatened all over the world. The trade war and the competitio­n to capture markets, the hunger for more and more profits by any means, including the destructio­n and pollution of the environmen­t, global warming and the concentrat­ion of wealth in the hands of a few to the detriment of almost 99 per cent of the population, have become the prominent features of the present age. The growing stock of all sorts of weapons of mass destructio­n, the threats given by the holders of nuclear weapons from time to time and the suppressio­n of liberties of the citizens who protest against these developmen­ts have become the signature mark of the present world.”

Justice Sawant memorably told Frontline in 2019: “The present government and the ruling party [i.e., the BJP] do not believe in democracy and their entire objective is to have a dictatorsh­ip. That is also clear from the fact that they believe in Manusmriti and not in our Constituti­on. They, even today, swear by Chaturvarn­ya and the caste system. These are the portents of the future.” National events that have snowballed since then have proved that Justice Sawant correctly read the pulse of current politics and what is yet to come.. $

 ??  ?? at a symposium on the Ayodhya verdict in New Delhi on December 7, 2010.
at a symposium on the Ayodhya verdict in New Delhi on December 7, 2010.

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