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Arguing that it crosses a “Lakshman rekha with regard to independence and integrity of the judiciary”, academic and activist Madhu Purnima Kishwar filed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Supreme Court of India challenging the nomination of former CJI Ranjan Gogoi as a member of the Rajya Sabha, on Wednesday, 18 March.
In the petition, which she has prepared in person – without the help of a lawyer – Kishwar has asked the apex court to:
Kishwar, despite being a known supporter of Prime Minister Narendra Modi government, had criticised the move when it became public, and termed it a “big blunder”. She also criticised the former CJI for accepting the nomination.
As grounds for her petition, she argues that the independence of the judiciary is an “essential part of the basic structure of the Constitution” and a “pillar of democracy.”
She also points out that previous appointments of this sort, such as those of Justice Baharul Islam to the Rajya Sabha after his retirement in 1983, as well as former CJI Ranganath Misra’s, had led to “serious misgivings about judicial integrity among general public.”
Such events, she argues, can give a handle to external enemies of India as well as “Break Up India Forces within the country” to badmouth the Supreme Court. She refers to the negative coverage of Gogoi’s appointment as an MP in the domestic and international media over the last couple of days to say this is already happening.
The petition also brings up the fact that Gogoi was one of the four judges who held that unprecedented press conference in January 2018, in which they spoke of ensuring the independence of the judiciary from the government.
These comments were made by the former CJI in March 2019 while part of a bench hearing a case relating to constitutionality of changes to the way tribunals would function in India.
Kishwar’s petition concludes by acknowledging that unlike the offices of the CAG or members of the UPSC and State Public Service Commissions, the framers of the Constitution did not explicitly restrict judges of the Supreme Court or the high courts to take up any public offices post-retirement. However, she argues that this was because the judges
As a result, she has asked the Supreme Court to mandate the new rule on a cooling off period for high court and Supreme Court judges, on the lines of the restrictions on post-retirement appointments for Lokpals and Lokayuktas under Section 8 of the 2013 Act which governs them.
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