Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SC slams lawyers over Kathua case

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: Nobody can impede the course of justice, the Supreme Court said on Thursday, coming down heavily on the lawyers who allegedly tried to prevent police from filing the charge sheet in the Kathua rapecum-murder case last week.

“What does the bar associatio­n have to do with the presentati­on of the charge sheet? You are supposed to argue your case, not protest. You have the right to practice with dignity and independen­ce, but that does not mean you can go on a strike or stop people from appearing in court,” a bench led by Chief Justice Dipak Misra told advocates who had come from Jammu to attend the hearing. “Discipline of the bar has to be kept on a high pedestal. And that’s not restricted to just this case,” he added.

On April 13, the SC took serious note of lawyers obstructin­g the judicial process in the sensationa­l case and initiated proceeding­s on its own accord.

Some apex court lawyers had drawn the judges’ attention to the manner in which advocates in Jammu heckled police officers while they were filing the charge sheet in court.

Questionin­g the lawyers’ conduct, the CJI asked: “Why was the police not allowed to present the charge sheet before the court? Why did they go to the magistrate?”

The lawyers of the Kathua Bar Associatio­n, however, denied obstructin­g the police. Insisting that the incident was misreporte­d by the media, they said the associatio­n withdrew its call for a strike on April 12.

The Jammu High Court Bar Associatio­n (JHCBA) told the bench that they did not explicitly support the protest taken out by Kathua lawyers, but had expressed solidarity for a different reason.

Speaking on its behalf, senior advocate Vikas Singh also denied that the victim’s lawyer, Deepika Singh Rajawat, was prevented from appearing before the high court in this regard. “She was prevented in another case, not this one,” he submitted.

The Bar Council of India told the SC bench that it has constitute­d a team headed by a former high court judge to visit Kathua and assess the situation pertaining to the lawyers’ protest.

The bench asked the JHCBA and BCI, among others, to file their affidavits by April 24. The matter was listed for hearing in the following week.

The gang-rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl in Kathua in January evoked shock and outrage across the country.

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Supreme Court

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