[<<The Delhi High Court on Monday ordered the release of activist Gautam
Navlakha, who was arrested in the Bhima Koregaon case on August 28, ANI
reported. The court said his detention was untenable by law and ended his
house arrest immediately. The judge also set aside the transit remand
ordered by a court in the city’s Saket locality against Navlakha.
The High Court also rejected the Maharashtra Police’s petition to extend
Navlakha’s house arrest by at least two days.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. I below.)

Also highly significant and deeply disturbing:
<<In the case of the Bhima Koregaon petition, however, the cause list as of
the evening of 27 September—a screenshot has been reproduced
below—mentioned only one judgment, to be pronounced by Chandrachud. On the
morning of the hearing, the registry uploaded a notice on its website
clarifying that the “pronouncement of judgment by Hon’ble Dr. D.Y.
Chandrachud may be read as to be pronounced by ‘Hon’ble A.M. Khanwilkar and
Hon’ble D.Y. Chandrachud, JJ.’”
...
Bhushan emphasised one aspect of Chandrachud’s judgment, which he said was
a “giveaway” that it was originally a unanimous verdict on behalf of all
three judges. In the final paragraph of his dissent, Chandrachud writes: “I
would direct that the petition be listed after three days for orders on the
constitution of Special Investigation Team.” It is odd for a dissenting
judgment to order that the case be listed again, especially when the
majority judgment dismisses the petition in question. “He would not have
written this if it was a dissent,” Bhushan said.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. II below.)
Visit the site for the screenshots.]

I/II.
https://scroll.in/latest/896584/bhima-koregaon-case-delhi-hc-orders-release-of-activist-gautam-navlakha-from-house-arrest

Bhima Koregaon case: Delhi HC orders release of activist Gautam Navlakha
from house arrest
The High Court also rejected the Maharashtra Police’s petition to extend
his house arrest by at least two days.

2 hours ago
Updated 7 minutes ago.

Scroll Staff

A file photo of social activist Gautam Navlakha | Wikimedia Commons/Siddeeq

The Delhi High Court on Monday ordered the release of activist Gautam
Navlakha, who was arrested in the Bhima Koregaon case on August 28, ANI
reported. The court said his detention was untenable by law and ended his
house arrest immediately. The judge also set aside the transit remand
ordered by a court in the city’s Saket locality against Navlakha.

The High Court also rejected the Maharashtra Police’s petition to extend
Navlakha’s house arrest by at least two days.

The activist said he was thrilled by the court’s order and thanked his
legal team. “I wish to thank the majority and dissenting Justices of the
Supreme Court for their judgement, which allowed us four weeks to seek
relief in this matter, and the public-spirited citizens and lawyers of
India for putting up a spirited fight on our behalf, whose memory I will
cherish,” Navlakha said in his statement. “I am humbled by the solidarity,
which crossed borders, rallying in our support.”

He also mentioned the other activists arrested along with him and said he
cannot forget them “and tens of thousands of other political prisoners in
India who remain incarcerated for their ideological convictions or on
account of false charges filed against them and/or wrongful conviction
under Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act”.

The Pune Police arrested Navlakha, Vernon Gonsalves, Arun Ferreira, Sudha
Bharadwaj and Varavara Rao on August 28 as part of their investigation into
violence during an event in Bhima Koregaon near Pune on January 1.

The police claimed the activists were “urban Naxalites” who used an
anti-caste commemoration event in Pune to whip up sentiments that resulted
in the violence in Bhima Koregaon. This was part of a larger plot, the
police claimed, to assassinate Prime Minister Narendra Modi and overthrow
the government. The activists are currently under house arrest.

On September 28, the Supreme Court allowed investigation officers to
continue with their inquiry into the violence. The bench of Chief Justice
of India Dipak Misra and Justices AM Khanwilkar and DY Chandrachud rejected
the plea for an inquiry by a Special Investigation Team into the arrests of
activists in the case. The top court also extended the house arrest of five
activists by four weeks.

II.
http://www.caravanmagazine.in/governance/law/was-chandrachuds-dissent-in-the-bhima-koregaon-case-a-unanimous-verdict-until-the-previous-evening

Was Chandrachud’s Dissent In The Bhima Koregaon Case A Unanimous Verdict
Until The Previous Evening?

By ARSHU JOHN |

29 September 2018

ASHOK DUTTA/HINDUSTAN TIMES/GETTY IMAGES

On 28 September, a majority judgment written by AM Khanwilkar, on behalf of
himself and Dipak Misra, dismissed the Bhima Koregaon petition. But until
the previous evening, the Supreme Court’s website indicated that there
would be only one judgment in the case—by the dissenting judge, DY
Chandrachud.

On 28 September, a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court pronounced its
verdict on a writ petition challenging the arrest of five activists,
writers and lawyers purportedly in relation to the violence at Bhima
Koregaon earlier this year. The petition sought their release from custody
and asked for the case to be handed over to a court-monitored Special
Investigation Team. A majority judgment written by AM Khanwilkar, on behalf
of himself and the chief justice, Dipak Misra, dismissed the petition. But
until the evening of 27 September, the Supreme Court’s website indicated
that there would be only one judgment in the case—by the dissenting judge,
DY Chandrachud.

Every day, the Supreme Court registry uploads cause lists—the cases each
bench will hear—of the following day on its website. The lists mention the
judges who will hear each case, the scheduled time of the hearing and the
judges who will be pronouncing verdicts.

In the case of the Bhima Koregaon petition, however, the cause list as of
the evening of 27 September—a screenshot has been reproduced
below—mentioned only one judgment, to be pronounced by Chandrachud. On the
morning of the hearing, the registry uploaded a notice on its website
clarifying that the “pronouncement of judgment by Hon’ble Dr. D.Y.
Chandrachud may be read as to be pronounced by ‘Hon’ble A.M. Khanwilkar and
Hon’ble D.Y. Chandrachud, JJ.’”



Going by convention, the Supreme Court registry ought to have mentioned
Khanwilkar’s name along with Chandrachud’s in the cause list for the Bhima
Koregaon case. For instance, the listing for the petition challenging the
prohibition of women’s entry to the Sabarimala temple, also heard in the
chief justice’s court on 28 September, noted, “Judgment by: Hon. The Chief
Justice, Hon. Mr. Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman, Hon. Dr. Justice D.Y.
Chandrachud and Hon. Ms. Justice Indu Malhotra.” The case was heard by a
bench of five judges, four of whom pronounced judgments. (Khanwilkar was
the fifth judge.) Although the list did not clarify which judges would be
concurring or dissenting—Malhotra’s judgement was a dissent—all four judges
were mentioned.

The Supreme Court registry’s notice stating that Khanwilkar would be
pronouncing a judgment provided no explanation for why the error occurred.
Rajkumar Choubey, the listing registrar in the Supreme Court, declined to
speak on the record about the case.

According to the senior advocate Prashant Bhushan, who represented one of
the petitioners, the omission of Khanwilkar’s name was likely not by
accident. “This is an important case for the government,” he told me.
Bhushan said that it is possible that the government learnt that
Chandrachud was writing the judgment and had “gotten alarmed.”

The senior advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi, who also represented one of the
petitioners, refused to comment because he was a counsel in the case. The
additional solicitor general, Tushar Mehta, also declined comment, noting
that “as [a matter] of principle, I do not discuss about any matter in
which I have appeared.”

Bhushan emphasised one aspect of Chandrachud’s judgment, which he said was
a “giveaway” that it was originally a unanimous verdict on behalf of all
three judges. In the final paragraph of his dissent, Chandrachud writes: “I
would direct that the petition be listed after three days for orders on the
constitution of Special Investigation Team.” It is odd for a dissenting
judgment to order that the case be listed again, especially when the
majority judgment dismisses the petition in question. “He would not have
written this if it was a dissent,” Bhushan said.

Chandrachud’s opinion also contains other observations peculiar for a
dissenting judgment. Earlier in the final paragraph, he writes, “The
Special Investigation Team shall submit periodical status reports to this
Court, initially on a monthly basis.” But again, the majority judgment
specifically rejects the plea to transfer the case to a court-monitored
SIT, and permits the Pune police to continue its investigation.
Pertinently, Chandrachud adds a footnote at the end of that sentence, which
acknowledges that his is a dissenting opinion, but provides little clarity
on the directions issued in the last paragraph: “Speaking as I do for the
minority, I have not indicated the names of the personnel who would
constitute the SIT. Should that occasion rise, liberty is granted to seek
an appropriate direction from this Court.”

Chandrachud makes other specific references to his opinion being the
dissenting judgment. Some of these mentions underscore another reason
Bhushan offered for why he thought the dissent was originally a unanimous
opinion—Khanwilkar’s majority judgment appeared to be “a rushed overnight
job.”

The majority judgment primarily rests on its finding that “the accused
cannot ask for changing the Investigating Agency or to do investigation in
a particular manner including for Court monitored investigation.” However,
Chandrachud challenges the applicability of the case law relied upon to
make this assertion, raising fundamental concerns over four of the cases
mentioned by Khanwilkar.

He shows that in two of the precedents cited—one of them written by
Khanwilkar himself—the Supreme Court had permitted the transfer of
investigations to the Central Bureau of Investigation in the interest of
fair and impartial justice. In two other cases that are used to deny the
relief to transfer the investigation, Chandrachud notes crucial facts that
distinguish the matter at hand—one judgment refused a request for transfer
of investigation by an anonymous petitioner, while the other featured a
petitioner who approached the court with “unclean hands.” In the Bhima
Koregaon case, he writes, the petitioners are neither anonymous nor is
there any argument “that the petitioners have been motivated by personal
gain or political considerations.”

Even without specifically referring to the majority judgment, Chandrachud’s
dissent demonstrates other significant failings of the verdict. After
citing these four cases, Khanwilkar writes that “no specific material facts
and particulars are found in the petition about mala fide exercise of power
by the investigating officer.” However, in his dissent, Chandrachud refers
to and relies on several such arguments made by the petitioners. For
instance, the petitioners pointed out that the police had released 13
unverified letters, which it claimed to be proof of a Maoist connection, to
the media. “The letters are unsigned and do not bear any identifiable
particulars including e-mail addresses or headers,” Chandrachud writes.

He also notes the petitioners’ argument that seven of these 13 letters were
authored by or addressed to one “Comrade Prakash” and that the judgment
convicting the Delhi University professor GN Saibaba had noted that he used
the pseudonym “Prakash.” Given that Saibaba has been lodged in Nagpur
Central Jail since March 2017, the petitioners argued that “the alleged
letters attributed to him after that date are ex-facie fabricated.”

Chandrachud also notes Singhvi’s submissions about the police bringing
witnesses from Pune for the arrests, which the senior advocate said
amounted to a “gross violation of law rendering the arrest, search and
seizure unlawful.” Accepting this argument, the dissenting judge writes:
“The two panch witnesses are employees of the Pune Municipal Corporation.
It is not disputed before this Court that they travelled as part of the
police team which made the arrest.” He writes in his conclusion:

I am of the view that while the investigation should not be thwarted, this
is a proper case for the appointment of a Special Investigating Team.
Circumstances have been drawn to our notice to cast a cloud on whether the
Maharashtra police has in the present case acted as fair and impartial
investigating agency. Sufficient material has been placed before the Court
bearing on the need to have an independent investigation.

Another indication that Khanwilkar’s judgment was written at the eleventh
hour is his reluctance to consider in detail the petitioners’ submissions
concerning the Pune police’s conduct of the investigation, even though such
consideration would be essential to determine whether the investigation is
fair and unbiased. “This is not the stage,” Khanwilkar writes, “where the
efficacy of the material or sufficiency thereof can be evaluated nor it is
[sic] possible to enquire into whether the same is genuine or fabricated.
We do not wish to dilate on this matter lest it would cause prejudice to
the named accused and including the co-accused who are not before the
Court.”

He repeats the phrase later in the judgment as a justification for
refraining from “dealing with the factual issues raised by the parties”
because it may cause “serious prejudice” to the accused. Again, towards the
end of the majority judgment, before declaring that the five activists will
remain under house arrest for four more weeks, Khanwilkar uses the same
phrase. He writes: “We may hasten to mention that we have perused the
Registers containing relevant documents and the Case Diary produced by the
State of Maharashtra. But we have avoided to dilate on the factual position
emerging therefrom, lest any prejudice is caused to any accused or the
prosecution, in any manner.”

Arshu John is an assistant editor at The Caravan. He was previously an
advocate practicing criminal law in Delhi.

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Peace Is Doable

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