0.2031
7667766266
x

The Changing Role of Supreme Court

iasparliament Logo
February 20, 2017

What does Article 19 (1) (a) says?

  • All citizens shall have the right to freedom of speech and expression.
  • The restrictions upon a fundamental right could be imposed only by law. i.e., only an elected legislature could restrict the freedom of speech in the interests of an overwhelmingly important public goal.
  • Also, this restriction could then be challenged before independent courts.
  • Thus, the Constitution protected citizens’ fundamental rights through two layers of safeguards.

How Supreme Court’s role is changing?

  • In recent months, that the delicate balancing between rights and public goals has come under immense strain, however, this time it is because of the Supreme Court.
  • Of late, the Court has begun to redefine its own role under the Constitution, from transforming itself from the guardian of civil rights to a great, overarching moral and political censor.
  • This is a role that the framers of constitution never envisaged. And it runs contrary to the very spirit of our Constitution.

What are three instances that had happened recently?

  • First, despite the film ‘Jolly LLB2’ was cleared by the Censor Board, the High Court of Bombay found certain scenes in the film “defame” the legal profession.
  • So, it ordered four cuts to be made. The producers moved the Supreme Court, but the SC has refused to intervene or to hear the merits of their case.
  • Second, acting upon a “public interest litigation”, the Court passed an interim order compelling all cinema theaters to play the national anthem.
  • It totally forget to think, is this kind of compelled patriotism something it can impose upon India’s free and independent citizens.
  • And lastly, the SC has passed a lot of interim orders, in a case involving sex-determination tests.
  • In the latest order, it directed internet search engines to block access to websites (by blocking search keywords), that are involved in someway to sex-determination.
  • The Court’s orders amount to making entire area of the Internet off-limits for everyone, no matter what the purpose is – research, investigation, or curiosity.

Why these happenings are worrying?

  • The ‘public interest litigation’ began as a movement to democratise access to courts. It discarded traditional rules of evidence and vested vast powers in courts to do justice.
  • But, in 2017, this very dilution of rules and existence of vast powers have become weapons in the hands of courts to cut down rights.
  • Instead of our elected representatives making laws, now, the Court has begun to make its own laws limiting, restricting, and suffocating speech.
  • Another example being, the Madras HC ordered that the teaching of Thirukkural be made compulsory in all schools. Here, again, it was made in the absence of any law.
  • The Supreme Court has indeed reduced us to passive subjects instead of active and thinking citizens by telling us what we can watch; what we can search; and how, when and where we must be patriotic.
  • Thus, this transformation of the Supreme Court into the Supreme Censor, is certainly a worrying sign.

 

Source: The Hindu

Login or Register to Post Comments
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to review.

ARCHIVES

MONTH/YEARWISE ARCHIVES

sidetext
Free UPSC Interview Guidance Programme
sidetext