Bombay HC dismisses PIL files against Vice President Dhankhar and Union Law Minister Rijiju

By Lokmat English Desk | Updated: February 9, 2023 15:16 IST2023-02-09T15:15:48+5:302023-02-09T15:16:33+5:30

Bombay High Court dismissed a public interest litigation filed against Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju and Vice President Jagdeep ...

Bombay HC dismisses PIL files against Vice President Dhankhar and Union Law Minister Rijiju | Bombay HC dismisses PIL files against Vice President Dhankhar and Union Law Minister Rijiju

Bombay HC dismisses PIL files against Vice President Dhankhar and Union Law Minister Rijiju

Bombay High Court dismissed a public interest litigation filed against Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju and Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar for their remarks on judiciary and the collegium system for appointment of judges.

The plea filed by Bombay Lawyers Association had claimed Rijiju and Dhankhar showed lack of faith in the Constitution with their remarks and conduct. It had sought for orders to restrain Dhankhar from discharging duty as the vice president, and Rijiju from discharging duty as cabinet minister for the central government.

The PIL claimed the frontal attack not just on the judiciary but the Constitution by the two executive officials has lowered the prestige of the Supreme Court in public.

A division bench of Acting Chief Justice S V Gangapurwala and Justice Sandeep Marne briefly heard the petitioner’s lawyer, Ahmed Abdi, and Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Anil Singh for the respondents.

We are not inclined to grant any relief. The petition is dismissed. Reasons would be recorded later, the court said. While Abdi argued that Dhankhar and Rijiju had lowered the reputation of the judiciary with their remarks, ASG Singh said the plea was frivolous and a publicity stunt.

The petition is frivolous, a waste of the court’s time and nothing but a publicity stunt. Exemplary cost should be imposed, Singh said. Abdi argued that Dhankhar and Rijiju are constitutionaries and hence should abstain from making such remarks.

We are not against debate and criticism but it should be held in Parliament and not in such public domain. This is lowering the judiciary’s reputation and image and affecting the faith people have in judiciary, Abdi said.

The Vice President and the Law Minister are attacking the collegium system as well as the doctrine of basic structure openly in a public platform. This kind of unbecoming behaviour by respondents who are holding constitutional posts is lowering the majesty of the Supreme Court in the eyes of the public at large, claimed the petition, filed through advocate Eknath Dhokale.

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