[《In Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, there is a segment called “The
Mouse’s Tale”. It features a dialogue between a dog (called Fury) and a
mouse. Fury is bored, and to pass the time, proposes taking the mouse to
court. His interlocutor is dismissive: “Said the mouse to the cur/ such a
trial, dear sir/ with no jury or judge/ would be wasting our breath.” Pat
comes the reply: “I’ll be the judge/ I’ll be the jury/ said cunning old
Fury/ I’ll try the whole cause / and condemn you to death.”
...
Between 2009 and 2012, public interest petitions were filed before the
Supreme Court, challenging Section 6A of the Citizenship Act, and also
asking for the updating of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) for the
State of Assam, in accordance with the Assam Accord. It was argued that
this was urgently required to check illegal migration from across the
border, and detect and deport non-citizens living in Assam. In the
beginning, the court only monitored the government’s progress, asked for
status reports, and prodded the administrative authorities.

All that changed, however, in late 2014. First, a bench of the court headed
by Justice Gogoi directed the State Coordinator of the NRC to submit in a
“sealed cover” a report indicating the “steps and measures” that he was
taking to complete his work of updating of NRC. This suggested that the
court was no longer content with mere oversight, but would direct both the
modalities and the implementation. Then, on December 17, 2014, a two-judge
bench of the court — again presided over by Justice Gogoi — referred the
constitutional challenge to a larger bench, but also passed a detailed
order (authored by Justice R.F. Nariman) setting out a time schedule
requiring the draft NRC to be completed by the end of January 2016. The
bench of Justices Gogoi and Nariman then virtually took over the task of
preparing the NRC.
...
And lastly, on the publication of the final draft NRC at the end of July
2018, around 4 million people had been left out. Now the State Coordinator
submitted to the court the “modalities” for the process of filing
objections, including a new list of 10 documents that could be relied upon,
and leaving out five base documents. The court refused to make the
Coordinator’s reports public. It even refused to share them with the Union
of India, citing “sensitivity”, despite repeated requests by the
Attorney-General. It then set a timeline of 60 days to process the
objections of the 4 million left-out individuals (based on the new list).》

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/in-the-court-of-last-resort/article25105456.ece

In the court of last resort

Gautam Bhatia

OCTOBER 03, 2018 00:02 IST
UPDATED: OCTOBER 03, 2018 07:10 IST

As Ranjan Gogoi takes over as the new Chief Justice of India, it’s his own
warning he must heed

In Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, there is a segment called “The
Mouse’s Tale”. It features a dialogue between a dog (called Fury) and a
mouse. Fury is bored, and to pass the time, proposes taking the mouse to
court. His interlocutor is dismissive: “Said the mouse to the cur/ such a
trial, dear sir/ with no jury or judge/ would be wasting our breath.” Pat
comes the reply: “I’ll be the judge/ I’ll be the jury/ said cunning old
Fury/ I’ll try the whole cause / and condemn you to death.”

Carroll’s poem stands as a warning against concentrating power in the hands
of a single individual. In January of this year, that was also the warning
issued by four judges of the Supreme Court, in an unprecedented press
conference. They objected to the manner in which the then Chief Justice of
India was using his power to allocate cases to different benches of the
Court. One of them, Justice Ranjan Gogoi, takes oath as the new Chief
Justice of India today. But a look at his own judicial conduct suggests
that it is from Justice Gogoi of the press conference that Chief Justice
Gogoi may need to heed that most important of warnings.

The NRC case
Between 2009 and 2012, public interest petitions were filed before the
Supreme Court, challenging Section 6A of the Citizenship Act, and also
asking for the updating of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) for the
State of Assam, in accordance with the Assam Accord. It was argued that
this was urgently required to check illegal migration from across the
border, and detect and deport non-citizens living in Assam. In the
beginning, the court only monitored the government’s progress, asked for
status reports, and prodded the administrative authorities.

All that changed, however, in late 2014. First, a bench of the court headed
by Justice Gogoi directed the State Coordinator of the NRC to submit in a
“sealed cover” a report indicating the “steps and measures” that he was
taking to complete his work of updating of NRC. This suggested that the
court was no longer content with mere oversight, but would direct both the
modalities and the implementation. Then, on December 17, 2014, a two-judge
bench of the court — again presided over by Justice Gogoi — referred the
constitutional challenge to a larger bench, but also passed a detailed
order (authored by Justice R.F. Nariman) setting out a time schedule
requiring the draft NRC to be completed by the end of January 2016. The
bench of Justices Gogoi and Nariman then virtually took over the task of
preparing the NRC.

Three incidents, in particular, highlight this. On February 14, 2017, the
NRC Coordinator placed a “power point presentation” before the Court, which
set out the “steps involved” (both present and future) in the preparation
and upgradation of the NRC. The court did not make this public.
Subsequently, however, it was reported that the court had approved an
entirely new method of ascertaining citizenship, known as the “Family Tree
Verification”, on the basis of a behind-closed-door power-point
presentation made to it by the State Coordinator. In July, the State
Coordinator stated that on the basis of the Family Tree Method, 65,694
cases had been “discovered to be false”. But as it was also reported, for
instance not only did people from the hinterlands have little awareness
about this method, but putting together a family tree (in the unique sense
in which it is being used in this case) was a big challenge especially for
women. None of this was taken into account by the Court.

Second, it became increasingly clear that the time schedule was
unrealistic. Extensions were requested, which the court granted grudgingly.
On November 30, 2017 — with the deadline a month away — the
Attorney-General requested a further extension. It was submitted to the
court that more than 75 lakh unverified claims would remain even after the
deadline had expired. The court refused an extension, and ordered that a
“partial” NRC be published on December 31, with the remainder published
later. The Attorney-General protested, arguing that this might raise a law
and order problem, as a large number of people would believe they had been
excluded from the list. The court brushed aside this objection.

And lastly, on the publication of the final draft NRC at the end of July
2018, around 4 million people had been left out. Now the State Coordinator
submitted to the court the “modalities” for the process of filing
objections, including a new list of 10 documents that could be relied upon,
and leaving out five base documents. The court refused to make the
Coordinator’s reports public. It even refused to share them with the Union
of India, citing “sensitivity”, despite repeated requests by the
Attorney-General. It then set a timeline of 60 days to process the
objections of the 4 million left-out individuals.

Checks and balances
The PIL-era Supreme Court has been praised for prodding inefficient
governments into action, and stepping in to fill legislative and executive
vacuum. However, there are times when silence and slow time are more
desirable than speed. Once you have deprived an individual of her
citizenship, you have deprived her of that most basic thing – the right to
have rights. That is not something to be done in a tearing hurry.

There is a deeper problem as well. Depriving an individual of her
citizenship is a very serious matter. And for this reason, our Constitution
envisages a detailed system of checks-and-balances before deprivation of
rights can happen. First, Parliament must pass a law. Next, the executive –
which is best acquainted with the facts and circumstances on the ground –
must implement it. And finally, courts review legislative and executive
action for constitutional compliance.

The NRC court has elided the second and third levels. It has become an
“executive court” – implementing the NRC updating, and reviewing its own
implementation. And it has done so in secrecy, through a jurisprudence of
“sealed covers” and “confidential reports”, where even the government is
not kept in the loop (let alone affected parties).

Not only is the court – as a matter of expertise – not suited to doing
this, but also, it deprives the individual of a vital, constitutional
remedy. Where is the individual to go if she wants to challenge the
contents of the reports filed in sealed cover? And which body can she
approach to ask that the content of the “confidential reports” – that may
ultimately subject her to deportation – be made public and subject to
challenge? An exercise in which the court decides – in secret consultation
with the State Coordinator – makes a mockery of both open justice, and
judicial review. The executive court has set itself up as the first and
final tribunal, without appeal or recourse.

Dreams and nightmares
Towards the end of Alice in Wonderland, Alice is herself caught up in a
farcical show trial, overseen by the Queen of Hearts, whose signature line
is “Off with their heads!” However, it turns out that Alice has been
dreaming all along; and she escapes with her head by waking up from the
dream.

But there would be no awakening for Deben Barman, a seventy-year old man,
who hanged himself after the names of his children and grandchildren did
not feature in the draft NRC. It was not just a dream for Abola Roy, who
killed his wife and then hanged himself, after she was notified a “doubtful
voter” in the NRC. Judicial orders, unlike children’s novels, have
consequences.

It is consequences like these that make Carroll’s warning about
unaccountable power so relevant to the judicial role. The constitutional
court of the largest democracy in the world must not resemble the court of
the Queen of Hearts. As the Chief Justice of India, Justice Gogoi has the
power — and the responsibility — to ensure that.

Gautam Bhatia is a Delhi-based lawyer


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