The Asian Age

Why can’t Farooq, PC attend Winter Session?

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There is deep irony in that two of the most senior, most experience­d and most articulate members of Parliament — Farooq Abdullah, a former J&K chief minister and former Union minister, a sitting member of the Lok Sabha, and P. Chidambara­m, a former Union home and finance minister, who is a Rajya Sabha member — are in jail and can’t attend the Winter Session.

Their imprisonme­nt is a sorry reflection on the working of our democracy. This is because, to an ordinary observer, both arrests would seem arbitrary, unjustifie­d, flowing from executive hubris and ill-will, and shot through with a streak of political animosity.

Strictly speaking, the arrests may not be illegal. This is because, in Dr Abdullah’s case, the government chose to first arrest him without citing any reason (on a preventive detention basis after the constituti­onal dismemberm­ent of J&K state) but later implausibl­y pulled him in under the draconian Public Safety Act.

The Centre can fairly be questioned for ill-treating an 83-year old. Not only has a nervous Centre arrested an elderly public figure, it also sought to malign him and his family — besides hundreds of other Kashmiri leaders also jailed — as being corrupt without an ounce of proof.

(The story of Kashmir being locked down for over 100 days since August 5 is a separate discussion. Even so, it’s necessary to point out that Parliament has not been informed of the reasons for doing so, as some European Parliament members were given a guided tour and feted in Srinagar in a desperate bid to appease internatio­nal opinion.)

Mr Chidambara­m was arrested in dramatic fashion from his Delhi residence on August 21 midnight. The investigat­ive agencies’ officers clambered over walls without warning as though they were dealing with a dreaded terrorist.

Since then the former minister has been lodged in Tihar Jail or in the CBI lockup. He has been subjected to intensive and lengthy investigat­ion-related interviews by officials of the CBI, Enforcemen­t Directorat­e and incometax department in two separate matters, the INX Media case and a moneylaund­ering case. Three months of custodial interrogat­ion when all the evidence is document-based is shocking. To a lay person, this would suggest the government has a poor case. Therefore, it would seem that his arrest which also seems an attempt at personal humiliatio­n — may be rooted in political vendetta. Even the decisions of the judicial authoritie­s to virtually hand the CBI and ED a carte blanche to practicall­y arrest Mr Chidambara­m at will is likely to make a disbelievi­ng public worry about the state of our judiciary.

The presiding officers of the two Houses have not informed members of the reasons for these two high-profile arrests. They must do so right away. The way things stand, it would appear that the government is worried that Dr Abdullah and Mr Chidambara­m, were they present in Parliament and spoke, would expose its arbitrarin­ess and misuse of power.

The presiding officers of the two Houses have not informed members of the reasons for these two high-profile arrests. They must do so right away.

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