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As day broke on 16 January, thousands of people gathered in different parts of Tamil Nadu, with the intention of breaking the law banning Jallikattu. In little-known villages and towns, the few hundred men and women who had gathered let bulls loose as a mark of protest, and then turned to TV cameras to proudly declare that they had defied the Supreme Court order.
At Alanganallur, one of the few Jallikattu hot spots in Tamil Nadu, massive police presence and lathicharge prevented the sport from happening. But the day was marred by protests. “We don’t want police. We don’t want the law or the courts. We don’t want to vote,” an old lady screamed into TV cameras.
But this was not the only instance of the courts being blatantly disregarded.
Through the first two weeks of January, the Hyderabad High Court’s ban on cockfights was disregarded, with large-scale events being held and betting running into several crore rupees. Reports suggest that leaders of many major political parties participated in the events.
It is not just for these ‘cultural’ traditions that the courts are being defied. Karnataka, for instance, has openly refused to release Cauvery river water to Tamil Nadu despite SC orders on more than one occasion.
But it is the attack on these ‘traditions’ which is driving the mass defiance of the courts, and in doing so, not only have the protesters failed, but so have the courts and our animal rights laws.
The animal rights discourse in India is driven by the morality of the English-speaking, urban elite. But when the courts also start going by it, then the fallout, as is being seen, is the erosion of its authority.
By flouting the courts, the people have made a grave misstep, for this open disregard could also play out against them in other issues. We can disagree with the law, but under no circumstance can we disobey it. This will come back to, well, bite us in our tails.
There are two important and related points to note here. Laws are made for the people, people should not be made to serve the law – as far as our actions don’t violate another person’s individual rights. And individual rights are supreme. Jallikattu does not take away any other person’s individual rights, banning it does.
There is a reason we have the legislature – the courts are not capable of legislating laws because that requires taking into account the sentiments of the people. While not all legislative mechanisms have been worked to allow Jallikattu just yet, it is clear that both the Centre and state governments think they must go ahead. By banning these events completely, the courts have sparked off a class war, from which there is no returning.
The solution lies in the courts correcting their view on animal rights. We have to move away from ‘traditions’ which disregard animal rights, but the pace of change cannot be decided by a minority of people who have nothing to do with these traditions – the change has to come from within. If it is forced, the courts stand to lose their authority.
(This views expressed above are the author’s own. )
(The article has been published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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