The Free Press Journal

CRIMINALIS­ATION OF POLITICS: CONCERNED SC CITES LAKSMAN REKHA FOR LAYING DOWN NORMS

- AGENCIES /

The Supreme Court on Thursday agreed the concern over rising "criminalis­ation" of politics" but said there is a 'lakshman rekha' which it should not cross and venture into the law making authority of Parliament to bar politician­s facing criminal charges.

A five-judge constituti­on bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, which commenced its hearing on PILs seeking to bar persons facing serious criminal charges from electoral politics, also referred to the doctrine of separation of power and said the job of the court was not to legislate and rather test the validity of the statute.

"Your (senior advocate Dinesh Dwivedi) submission basically is that we should safeguard the rights of all citizens. You are exhorting us to deal with criminalis­ation of politics.

"You want us to exhort Parliament to lay down generally that such a law should exist which prevents criminalit­y among legislator­s," the bench, also comprising justices R F Nariman, A M Khanwilkar, D Y Chandrachu­d and Indu Malhotra, said.

The bench said that there was a 'lakshman rekha' with regard to separation of power when senior lawyer Dwivedi, appearing for NGO Public Interest Foundation, argued that the court should step in as the legislatur­e was not doing enough and rather silent on the issue.

"Let me correct myself, it is the 'lakshman rekha' to the extent that we declare the law and don't make the law. We cannot create the law," Justice Nariman said.

Attorney General K K Venugopal, appearing for the Centre, however, opposed the petitions saying that the issue squarely fell under the domain of Parliament and the court should not venture into the territory.

The top law officer also referred to the concept of separation of power, the Article 21 (right to life) and the concept that a person is presumed to be innocent till proven guilty. The bench also asked should the court "lay down the principle" since legislatur­e is silent on it.

"You are asking us to issue a (writ) of mandamus to the Election Commission to lay down a norm that all three stages of criminal procedure (FIR, filing of charge sheet and framing of charges) should form basis for debarring candidates from contesting elections. But, the issue is should we go into this or the Parliament should make a law," the bench said.

It also said so far as the Representa­tion of Peoples Act (RPA) is concerned, there was automatic disqualifi­cation of a lawmaker in the event of conviction.

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