Judiciary today is a workman with no tools, says Justice Ranjan Gogoi
NEWDELHI: The courts have done their bit to uphold the “vision of justice” detailed in the Constitution, but such efforts have not really made a difference on the ground, where it is a “descent into chaos” with messengers being sued, shot, or simply not delivering the message out of fear, justice Ranjan Gogoi said on Thursday.
For the justice system to become more effective, the focus perhaps needs to move to the enforcement of the judiciary’s decisions, said Gogoi, who was delivering the Ramnath Goenka Lecture in New Delhi. The Supreme Court justice said he wouldn’t venture to comment on the role of the executive and the legislature in upholding this, but added that it would make for an “interesting” and “contentious” story.
Justice Gogoi described justice, as referenced by the Constitution, as “not something that is a standalone precept but an amalgam of ideals like “socialism”; “democracy”; “liberty”; “equality”; “fraternity”, to name a few”.
Terming the “vision” and the actual implementation as the “aspirational” and “operational” aspects of the Constitution, justice Gogoi said the courts had repeatedly sought to bridge the gap. Referring to multiple cases, including the NALSA case that recognised the rights of transgenders, he said that both in an “intimate private sphere of life” and in “matters of faith” courts have stuck to the principle that “societal morality is fickle, and not that, but constitutional morality.. ought to dictate terms.”
Both the subjects mentioned by the judge have become more contentious than ever before, with, in some cases, local informal courts, religious groups, even mobs, taking the law into their hands. The court is currently hearing a challenge to an antiquated anti-homosexuality law and also the Ayodhya dispute (although it has made it clear that it will treat the latter as a land dispute and not a religious one).
The challenge for the judiciary, justice Gogoi added, is to keep trying to bridge the gap between the “vision of justice” and its implementation.
But there are other challenges as well, he said, including “pendency, arrears, and judges’ strength.” “The judiciary today is not a poor workman who blames his tools, but it is a workman with no tools”. There are other challenges as well. Justice Gogoi was one of four judges who in January went public with their grievances over how the country’s top court is being run and how cases are being allocated.
Without discussing that press conference, justice Gogoi said the judiciary will have to stay independent. Channeling American founding father Alexander Hamilton, he said civil liberties had nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but could be at risk from the union of the judiciary with either the executive or the legislature.” As India evolves, the judiciary, which is “seen as a course corrector, a leveller, a democratiser of sorts” will also evolve, but it has to stay independent, he added. “A chain is only as strong as its weakest link.” NEWDELHI: People who are underweight are at a higher risk of early death compared to those with a healthy weight, according to data from a large population-based study of 26,001 people of 20 years and above in Chennai. Those who are overweight or slightly obese carried no such risk.
Conventional wisdom indicates that people who are overweight are at higher risk of disease and death. “Our study indicated that instead of obsessing about body mass index (BMI), people should focus on cardiovascular fitness by being healthy and active,” said Dr Vishwanathan Mohan, director of the Madras Diabetes Research Foundation (MDRF), Chennai. The study, published in PLOS One, used Chennai Urban Rural Epidemiology Study (CURES) data and had a median follow-up of 10.3 years.
The study indicates that carrying a few extra kilos doesn’t hurt if people are active and fit. “A person who runs but is slightly overweight will have a lower risk of dying than a person who has a healthy weight but is inactive,” said Dr Mohan.
A major compounding factor is the overall health as low weight could be driven by malnourishment, tuberculosis, cancer or other illnesses. “Underweight people are almost always not healthy, so this finding didn’t surprise. What was unusual was that those who were overweight and slightly obese did not have a higher risk of death compared to healthy people, which could have been because the mean body mass index (BMI) was a low 24,” said Dr Ambrish Mithal, chairman, endocrinology, Medanta, Gurugram.
BMI is a height-weight ratio used to determine healthy weight. “To compare, the mean BMI in people with diabetes being treated in an urban, private-paying environment is between 28 and 30,” said Dr Mithal. The study found that people with diabetes have three times higher risk of dying than healthy people. Other contributors are physical inactivity, high LDL cholesterol and triglycerides, high blood pressure, smoking and alcohol use.