Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
There are 25,000,000 cases pending in our courts. Judicial activism
is abstracting from the problem of this magnitude of judicial inactivism
In the other case I would like to recall, Imran Khan was taken
to court by two fellow-cricketers; for several days in succession,
cricketing cognoscente around the world watched with fascinated
interest the unfolding of the case; hearings were continuous;
as soon as they were over, the jury went into recess for a few
house, returned and pronounced its verdict, to be followed within
minutes by the presiding judge's sentence.
Here, when courts are
not granting stay orders, they are reserving their judgments.
In the aquaculture case, one of the most meretricious practitioners
of judicial activism took ten months between reserving judgment
and pronouncing it.
No wonder there are 25,000,000 cases pending in our courts. I
have deliberately given the figure in numerals because the bald
expression 25 million perhaps fails to
convey in mere words the magnitude of the problem. Judicial activism
is abstracting from the problem of this magnitude of judicial
inactivism by focusing on the involvement of recognisable political
names in a small fraction of the cases pending in our courts.
During 1996, these cases have involved, apart from havala former
prime minister Rao in the Lakhubhai Pathak, JMM and St Kitts
cases; Jayalalitha and her ministers in a whole sheaf of cases
filed in Tamil Nadu courts; Kalpnath Rai; H K L Bhagat; Sukh
Ram; Satish Sharma and Sheila Kaul. In 1997, one might confidently
expect this line-up of politicians to extend to Laloo Prasad Yadav
and the political patrons of the Indian Bank chairman, M Gopalakrishnan.
Plus whatever -- if anything -- comes out of the Bofors papers
now deposited in the kind custody to 'Tiger' Joginder Singh. There
is also the outside possibility that after the Jain Commission
report is out other politicians might find themselves on the judicial
anvil.
In 1996, virtually none of the political cases moved beyond the
stage of granting or refusing bail. Yet, such was the drama which
judicial activism built around the question of bail that the great
unwashed public might be forgiven for thing that judicial remand
is what crime and punishment is all about. I am not a jurist and
have never studied the law. But I have it one the authority of
at least one former Chief Justice of India that it is only when
there is a clear and tangible possibility of the accused either
absconding or tampering with evidence that bail should be refused.
Otherwise, it should be granted as a matter of routine.
In the instant case, was there anything a defeated and discredited
former prime minister could do about doctoring the evidence available
to a pickle king who says that a decade ago he neither paid the
former prime minister nor received any favour from him? What equally
could the same ex-statesman have done in the present concatenation
of events that he did not have ample opportunity of doing between
the time he was external affairs minister and then prime minister
for a leisurely long five years?
And what can he, out of power,
have done about fiddling with documents relating to political
payments allegedly made several years earlier and, if made, certainly
several years before he demitted office? Yet, to squeeze what
humiliation was possible out of the spectacle of a former prime
minister mounting the witness-box to sign his bail bond, the country
was subjected for months to wrangling between the Bench and the
Bar over the purely procedural question of judicial remand.
Yet, because judicial remand involves incarceration in a jail cell,
remand has come to be generally regarded as 'being sent to
prison' -- and, therefore, tantamount to punishment for a
crime in regard to the substance of which judicial proceedings
have not even begun.
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