SUPREME COURT TRANSFERS JNU STUDENT KANHAIYA KUMAR’S BAIL PLEA TO
DELHI HIGH COURT
After the
Supreme Court stopped short of hearing the bail petition of JNU Students’ Union
president Kanhaiya Kumar, arrested in a sedition case, and transferred his plea
to the Delhi High Court on Friday, his lawyers rushed to the High Court, where
the hearing did not take place because of some technical glitches.Though a
Bench of Justices J. Chelameswar and Abhay Manohar Sapre agreed that repeated
mob violence on the court premises against Mr. Kumar was “unusual and
extraordinary”, it observed that his lawyers, by seeking bail directly from the
Supreme Court, were offering a “very dangerous proposition” that could become a
precedent for other accused.The Supreme Court ordered the Centre and the police
to provide special security arrangements at the High Court hearing for Mr.
Kumar.A metropolitan magistrate court refused to grant bail to the former Delhi
University lecturer, S.A.R. Geelani, in the sedition case connected with a
function on February 10.
The
Supreme Court on Friday agreed with Kanhaiya Kumar, president of the Jawaharlal
Nehru University Students’ Union, that repeated mob violence on court premises
against him was “unusual and extraordinary”, but stopped short of hearing his
bail petition barely 24 hours after listing the case at the top of the day’s
work chart.Instead, a Bench of Justices J. Chelameswar and Abhay Manohar Sapre
transferred the petition to the Delhi High Court to be heard expeditiously. The
court ordered the Centre and the police to provide special security
arrangements, with the entry to the High Court regulated by the
Registrar-General of the latter.On transferring the petition, Justice
Chelameswar said: “I personally believe we would end up showing that courts
other than the Supreme Court are incapable of handling this situation.”Mr.
Kumar, now lodged in the Tihar jail on a 14-day remand, moved the Supreme Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution seeking protection of his life and
liberty.
On
Thursday, the Bench posted the petition for the next day as a “citizen has come
saying that his fundamental rights are under threat.”On Friday, the first
question the Bench shot at Mr. Kumar’s counsel and senior advocate, Raju
Ramachandran, was why they had “rushed into this.” “Did you move a bail
application before the magistrate court,” Justice Chelameswar asked.Mr.
Ramachandran explained that the “legal profession in Delhi is agitated” and it
was “impractical, unsafe and dangerous” to return to the Patiala House courts.Justice
Chelameswar agreed that doing so was out of the question, but asked what had
prevented them from moving the Delhi High Court.“The High Court is near the
same hexagon from the Patiala House courts at India Gate ... there is a
simmering local situation,” Mr. Ramachandran replied.Senior advocate Rajeev
Dhawan said the High Court was just a “1,000 yards from where the crow flies”
from Patiala House.Mr. Ramachandran argued that the Supreme Court would better
understand the dire circumstances as it was already inquiring into the
violence.Senior advocate Soli Sorabjee, also for Mr. Kumar, said all that the
court had to see was whether the apprehension to the life of the student was
genuine or “fancy”.Solicitor-General Ranjit Kumar said a constitutional court like
the Delhi High Court “can look after itself”.
Prof. John Kurakar
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