Millennium Post

HC stops Mukhtar Ansari from going on parole

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: The right to contest an election from jail does not give anyone the right to be released for campaignin­g, the Delhi High Court on Monday said while rejecting custody parole to MLA Mukhtar Ansari to canvass for himself in the UP assembly polls.

"A right to contest the election cannot imply that the candidate gets a right to be released from jail for canvassing as a candidate for being elected. If the candidate is in custody for an alleged offence, it would be the discretion of the court to release him or not, depending on the facts and circumstan­ces of the case," Justice Mukta Gupta observed.

Setting aside the trial court's decision to grant custody parole to Ansari, the judge, in a 23-page order, said "when a person in custody fills up nomination as a candidate, he does not get a vested right to be released for canvassing. He runs the risk of not released on bail to contest election from custody."

Ansari, an MLA who recently joined the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) to contest from Mau Assembly seat in UP, was given custody parole by a trial court on February 16 till March 4, enabling him to campaign in the election.

The order was stayed the next day by the high court after Election Commission of India (ECI) moved a plea seeking cancellati­on of his parole on the ground that he may influence witnesses in the 2005 murder case of BJP MLA Krishnanan­d Rai in which he is facing trial in a Delhi court.

The high court observed that "the legal right of a candidate to contest an election does not translate into a legal right to canvass for his candidatur­e.

"Further, the requiremen­t of a candidate to canvass in an election for himself is always subservien­t to the larger public interest i.e. the constituti­onal mandate of holding a free and fair election. No candidate can be permitted to do any act which interferes with the process of a free and fair election."

The court accepted the contention of ECI'S counsel and senior advocate Dayan Krishnan that while seeking permission to go out during daytime in custody, Ansari has been provided security cover, violative of instructio­ns of ECI and interferin­g in free and fair polls.

"The impugned order is a composite order where custodia legis (custody of the law) of Ansari continues by posting armed guards. This is contrary to clause 3.21 of the Instructio­ns of the ECI. It is well settled that what cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly.

"No court can pass orders violating the ethos of a free and fair election. Undoubtedl­y the impugned order violates the instructio­ns of ECI," the court said.

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