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In what is being seen as another blow to the image of an independent judiciary, the most senior judge in the Karnataka High Court, Justice Jayant Patel, resigned on Monday.
According to Bar and Bench, the resignation is a mark of protest due to his non-elevation as Chief Justice or Acting Chief Justice of the High Court.
Justice Patel, the senior-most puisne judge of the Karnataka HC, sent his resignation letter to Chief Justice SK Mukherjee, who is set to retire on 9 October, unless he is promoted to the Supreme Court.
This is not the first time that Justice Patel has reportedly been passed up for a promotion. The senior judge was the Acting Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court, prior to his transfer to Karnataka.
The move is seen by many as a punishment for his ruling in the Ishrat Jahan case in Gujarat, back in 2011. Justice Patel was part of the division bench that handed over the investigation into the 2004 killings of Ishrat Jahan, Javed Sheikh and two others, to a Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT). The SIT was headed by former CBI chief Raghavan.
After the SIT handed over its report in December 2011, concluding that the police's version of an encounter was false, the division bench transferred the case to CBI.
In a report for The Wire, Dushyant Dave says that judges whose rulings have gone against the BJP and its leaders, are finding their prospects for advancement blocked.
"Political parties are interfering in the transfer of judges. He was one of the honest judges. Why are the corrupt ones not being transferred?” asks Sadashiv Reddy, a member of the All India Bar Council, and added, “Patel had passed an order against a top bureaucrat and Amit Shah. Hence, he was made to sit in third place in Allahabad High Court.”
In a similar incident in 1977, Justice HR Khanna had resigned after he was superseded by Justice Beg for the post of Chief Justice of India.
He reportedly paid the price for being the lone voice of dissent in a five-judge bench that upheld the Indira Gandhi-led government's right to imprison political opponents.
(This article was first published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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