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The Delhi High Court’s remarks on nationalism and love for the nation while granting bail to JNU student leader Kanhaiya Kumar were denounced on Thursday by senior legal experts.
Judge Pratibha Rani’s observations are a part of a judicial trend which needs to be curbed right away, leading advocates said, with one dubbing them “totally uncalled for, unwarranted and unfortunate”.
Senior lawyers said the judge appeared to be broadly espousing the official line on the events at the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) where Kanhaiya Kumar was arrested on 12 February on charges of sedition.
He was accused of raising anti-India slogans at a meeting organised to mark the execution of parliament attack convict Afzal Guru, a militant from Jammu and Kashmir. Kanhaiya Kumar has repeatedly denied the charge.
The high court judge, while granting six-month interim bail to Kanhaiya Kumar, reminded him of his fundamental duties, love for the country, nationalism and the sacrifices soldiers were making and the demoralising effect that anti-India slogans had on the families of martyrs.
Pointing out that the observations had been lapped up by government circles and right-wing groups, activist-lawyer Prashant Bhushan told IANS: “It is a political rather than a legal judgment.
Echoing Bhushan’s sentiments, Supreme Court Bar Association president and senior counsel Dushyant Dave described the observations as “totally uncalled for, unwarranted and unfortunate”.
Former Delhi High Court judge Rupinder Singh Sodhi said that making loose observations was an unfortunate trend that the judiciary was adopting. “I think this trend has to stop now and immediately.” Justice Sodhi, also a senior lawyer in the Supreme Court, says granting interim bail had no legal precedent.
Another leading lawyer who did not wish to be identified by name said that while attempting to define nationalism in a pluralistic society, the judge seemed to have overstepped her judicial limits. “Her observations are symptomatic of all that ails Indian judiciary and deserve to be expunged.”
(Parmod Kumar can be contacted at saneel2010@gmail.com. This article has been published in arrangement with IANS.)
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