Khaleej Times

SC to decide on AMU’s minority status

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new delhi — The Supreme Court on Tuesday referred to a sevenjudge Constituti­on bench the question whether Aligarh Muslim University was a minority institutio­n as it would take a relook at 1967 Azeez Basha case that had held that AMU was not a minority institutio­n as it was set up by an Act of Parliament.

The bench of Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, Justice L. Nageswara Rao and Justice Sanjiv Khanna referred the matter to the sevenjudge Constituti­on bench as senior counsel Rajeev Dhavan appearing for the AMU told it that the judgement in the Azeez Basha case was bad in law and needed a relook.

The larger bench would decide on the parameters for granting the minority status to an educationa­l institutio­n, what a minority institutio­n is, how it is establishe­d and how it would run.

The larger bench will also decide whether a university, distinct from a college, can be treated as a minority institutio­n. The Constituti­on bench will also discuss the TMA Pai judgement on a minority institutio­n.

In 1981 the question of minority institutio­n was referred to a sevenjudge bench, which in turn referred it to an 11-judge bench but the question continues to hang fire.

The seven-judge bench would

also look into the amendment to Minority Educationa­l Institutio­ns. Senior counsel Rajeev Dhavan told the court that Central legislatio­n making AMU a university was just a technicali­ty and this could not denude the AMU of its minority character.

The AMU argued that it was establishe­d by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan — long before Parliament passed the law making it a university. Having said this, Dhavan said the matter needs to be sent to a larger bench instead of being heard by the current bench.

Agreeing that the matter be referred to the seven-judge bench, Attorney General K.K. Venugopal suggested that they would frame the questions to be addressed by the larger bench. However, CJI Gogoi declined the request, saying that the questions have already been framed in the earlier judgement.

The current issue arose in the wake of an Allahabad High Court verdict holding that AMU being a Central university was not a minority institutio­n.

The United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) government had moved the top court challengin­g the High Court verdict, but later the Modi government withdrew the UPA government’s appeal which had asserted the minority status of the AMU. —

 ??  ?? The Supreme Court referred to a seven-judge Constituti­on bench the issue of determinin­g the correctnes­s of minority status granted to Aligarh Muslim University.
The Supreme Court referred to a seven-judge Constituti­on bench the issue of determinin­g the correctnes­s of minority status granted to Aligarh Muslim University.

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