Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

SC refuses to stay CAA, gives govt time to reply

Top court indicates matter could be referred to Constituti­on bench

- Murali Krishnan

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Wednesday refused to stay the implementa­tion of the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA), but indicated that the matter would be referred to a Constituti­on bench.

The court, which issued notice to the central government on December 18 last year, gave it four more weeks to respond, after a request by Attorney general KK Venugopal. Venugopal pointed out that there were only 60 petitions when the case was first heard on December 18 but at least 144 petitions have been filed as on Wednesday and copies of the fresh petitions had not been supplied to the central government yet.

All the petitions were listed for hearing on Wednesday. One of the petitions was a transfer plea by the central government seeking the transfer of all petitions pending in various high courts to the Supreme Court.

The law, passed by the Lok Sabha on December 9, the Rajya Sabha on December 11, and notified on January 10, fast-tracks Indian citizenshi­p to non-muslim minorities from six religions who came to India from Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Afghanista­n before December 31, 2014.

A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India SA Bobde and comprising justices S Abdul Nazeer and Sanjiv Khanna expressed its inclinagoi­ng

tion to refer the matter to a Constituti­on bench while making it clear that it “will not pass any orders either way now.”

No order was passed to this effect; usually the Chief Justice of India sets up a Constituti­on Bench after there is a judicial order seeking the creation of one. In this case, the earliest such an order can come, under normal circumstan­ces, is the next time the case is heard, towards the end of February.

The bench also segregated petitions from Assam and Tripura. Senior Counsel Kapil Sibal has been asked to submit a list of petitions from Assam and Tripura to the court.

While the law has been challenged

SEPARATE PETITIONS ON ASSAM, TRIPURA Petitions concerning

Assam and Tripura – which have raised concerns related to demography of the states -- will be dealt with separately from other pleas

on various counts, the issues in these two states are not the same as in the rest of the country. Both states have a history of protests against outsiders who compete with indigenous people for land, other resources, and jobs.

Pradyot Debbarman, one of the petitioner­s from Tripura, welcomed this order. “We are glad that our issues were not hijacked as has been on previous occasions.”

Former Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi said: “The matter is very serious and the Centre is yet to react. For the people of Assam, it is an important matter. Why hasn’t the government responded? Agitation has been on for so long in every nook and corner but the government does not want to listen to anyone.”

Senior counsel Kapil Sibal, appearing for petitioner­s, told the court that the case should be heard by a Constituti­on Bench and asked for deferring the operation of CAA and the updation of the National Population Register (NPR) .

The updation of the NPR is scheduled to commence from April 1. This is widely seen as a step towards a nationwide National Register of Citizens (NRC), although the government has denied that the NPR is connected to the NRC. It has also clarified that there are no plans for a nationwide NRC.

Attorney General KK Venugopal, appearing for the central government, vehemently opposed the prayer made by Sibal and claimed that no stay should be granted without hearing the central government. Sibal reasoned that he was not asking for a stay but only praying for a postponeme­nt of the process of implementa­tion, but the AG countered that this was effectivel­y a stay.

Senior advocates KV Viswanatha­n and Shyam Divan, representi­ng the petitioner­s, also pressed for interim relief. Viswanatha­n too told the court that delaying the process of implementa­tion is not the same as a stay. He submitted that people could be disenfranc­hised if not included in the NPR.

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