The Asian Age

SC may give compensati­on to victims of gau rakshaks

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The Supreme Court on Friday indicated that it will consider award of compensati­on to the families of victims of cow vigilantis­m, including 15-year-old Junaid Khan who was killed in Haryana on a Mathurabou­nd train on June 22.

A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra gave this indication when advocate Indira Jaising pleaded for a direction to the states to pay compensati­on to victims of mob lynching. The CJI asked her to file a proper applicatio­n and fixed the next hearing on October 31.

Ms. Jaising, appearing for journalist Tushar Gandhi, brought to the notice of the court 66 alleged incidents of cow vigilantis­m.

The Supreme Court on Friday indicated that it would consider award of compensati­on to the families of victims of cow vigilantis­m in various states, including to the next of kin of the father of 15year-old Junaid, who was killed in a train.

A three-judge bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justices A.M. Kanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrachu­d gave this indication when senior advocate Indira Jaising pleaded for a direction to the states concerned to pay compensati­on to the victims. The CJI asker her to file a proper applicatio­n so that the court could pass appropriat­e orders.

The CJI observed that law and order was a primary concern for the

The petitioner­s had sought criminal action against cow vigilante groups

court and sought reports from states in which such instances have been recently reported to give details about investigat­ions into such cases. The court was informed that only five states had filed status reports and others had not filed affidavits. The bench granted further time to the other States.

During the last hearing, the bench asked the states to nominate a senior police officer, preferably of the rank of deputy superinten­dent of police, to ensure that vigilante groups don’t “behave as if they are law unto themselves and take prompt action and prosecute such people with quite promptitud­e.

Ms Indira Jaising, appearing for journalist Tushar Gandhi, brought to the notice of the court 66 alleged incidents of mob lynching and assaults in the name of cow vigilantis­m after the central government’s undertakin­g in the court.

The petitioner­s, Congress activist Tehseen Poonawalla and others, had sought criminal action against cow vigilante groups whose recent rampages and lynchings have seen communal tensions rise in the country.

The petitions had also sought a direction to the Central and State government­s to pull down all the videos of violence uploaded by cow vigilante groups from social media sites.

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