[The Supreme Court, in its May 2014 order, had gone into meticulous
detail about why jallikattu should be banned. Key to its argument were
two points: that the sport cannot be conducted without unnecessarily
ill-treating and harming the animal for human pleasure and that
culture and tradition could not dictate cruelty to animals. The court
said that the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act "over-shadows or
overrides the so-called tradition and culture”.]

http://scroll.in/article/801579/by-allowing-jallikattu-executive-has-clearly-undermined-the-judiciary-legal-experts

POLITICAL SPORT
By allowing jallikattu, Executive has clearly undermined the
Judiciary: legal experts

The Centre’s move to allow the bull-taming sport comes under severe
criticism from animal rights groups and lawyers alike.

Sandhya Ravishankar  · Yesterday · 08:48 pm

The Bharatiya Janata Party has notched up several brownie points in
the poll-bound state of Tamil Nadu with its latest notification
permitting the traditional sport of bull-taming or jallikattu, even
though the Supreme Court had effectively banned the pastime in 2014.
But legal experts are raising red flags over the move.

At around 9.30 am on Friday, Minister of State for Road Transport,
Highways and Shipping, Pon Radhakrishnan tweeted to say that the
Centre had permitted the sport to continue.

[Facsimile of tweets]

In 2011, the Ministry of Environment and Forests had included bulls
among the list of animals that could not be used as performing
animals. This meant that they could not also be exhibited or trained
for jallikattu events. This notification was upheld by the Supreme
Court in May 2014.

This week, the Ministry of Environment and Forests made public a
Gazette notification dated January 07 which stated that bulls
continued to remain in the list of banned performing animals but added
an exception for jallikattu and other customary sports. It stated:

“Provided that bulls may be continue to be exhibited or trained as a
performing animal, at events such as jallikattu in Tamil Nadu and
bullock cart races in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Punjab, Haryana, Kerala
and Gujarat in the manner by the customs of any community or practiced
traditionally under the customs or as a part of culture, in any part
of the country subject to the following conditions…”

It added that jallikattu and the bullock cart races can be conducted
only in the “places where it is traditionally held annually” and that
such events must adhere to the provisions of the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals Act.

Campaigners are angry
Animal rights campaigners are understandably upset with decision. The
people who had move filed the original petition against the sport in
2011 are planning to move court to get the notification scrapped. They
allege that it is an attempt by the Centre to appease some voters in
an election year.

“I think the BJP has shot itself in the foot because it has sent a
very unfortunate signal to the country that any political party will
overturn a Supreme Court judgement just for political considerations,”
said S Radha Rajan, one of the original petitioners. “The Congress did
this earlier by overturning the Shah Bano judgement. What kind of a
signal is the BJP sending to the people of this country on the
sanctity of the judiciary?”

For legal experts, the larger implications of the notification on
balance of powers in a democracy are worrying.

The notification "is in direct violation of the judgment of the
Supreme Court”, senior Supreme Court advocate KK Venugopal told Scroll
by email. “The notification pretends that the bull is a performing
animal and is wholly silent about the various acts of cruelty which
are inflicted on it for converting the peaceful domestic animal into a
violent one."

He added, "This notification, according to me, is wholly uncalled for
and is in clear defiance and violation of the judgment of the Supreme
Court, which independent of the notification banning jalikattu,
directs the government to ensure that the jalikattu is not performed,
because cruelty and infliction of pain on the bull is inherent in this
so-called sport.”

Detailed explanation
***The Supreme Court, in its May 2014 order, had gone into meticulous
detail about why jallikattu should be banned. Key to its argument were
two points: that the sport cannot be conducted without unnecessarily
ill-treating and harming the animal for human pleasure and that
culture and tradition could not dictate cruelty to animals. The court
said that the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act "over-shadows or
overrides the so-called tradition and culture”.*** [Emphasis added.]

Legal experts feel that this notification by the Centre will not
withstand a legal challenge. “It seems to be a case where the
Executive is undermining the Judiciary,” said Ritwick Dutta,
environmental lawyer. “If there is a loophole or scope for
modification, government should go for clarification and modification
of the order instead of issuing notifications of this nature. This is
liable to be struck down not just by Supreme Court but even the High
Court can strike this down."

He pointed out that only the Parliament can overturn a Supreme Court
ruling, not the Executive. "In this case, it is a final judgement of
the Supreme Court and the government did not file any review
petition," Dutta said. "The government should have approached the
Supreme Court.”

Dutta said that the notification could encourage regressive cultural
practices such as those practised in Maharashtra during celebrations
of Nagpanchami, which involves cruelty to snakes. “It is completely
unscientific to cite culture and tradition,” he said. “Keeping of
bears was also a cultural practice. Culture cannot overrule
constitutional provisions. The Ministry of Environment’s Animal
Welfare Division should be more careful about such issues.”

Even if the case goes back to court and jallikattu is stopped once
again, political parties like the BJP and the ruling All India Anna
Dravida Kazhagam can both claim credit with traditional voters for
having tried to restore the practice. But the BJP may find it more
difficult to answer questions about whether it has violated the
privileges of the judiciary.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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