[So very clinically analysed and the essences - both postives and
negatives, neatly laid out.

Principles laid down.
Actions to flow therefrom just eschewed.]

SC’s decision not to decide on validity of restrictions in Kashmir is not
just deferral, it is abdication
It has taken the Court five months to decide on the challenge to the
communications lockdown. If the government now fails to comply with the
judgment, will it take another five months for the issue to be decided? By
that stage, the damage would already have been done.

Written by Chintan Chandrachud |

Updated: January 16, 2020 10:10:00 am

J-K Police seize mortar shells under bridge on Jammu-Pathankot highway
After expounding upon the relevant principles in this way, the Court
abandoned its tasks of deciding whether the suspension orders and Section
144 orders were valid or invalid, and what consequences would follow. (File)

On January 10, the Supreme Court delivered a judgment in a case challenging
what is now widely known as the “communications lockdown” in Jammu and
Kashmir. On August 4, 2019, mobile phone networks, internet connectivity
and landlines were disabled in large parts of the state, in anticipation of
the monumental constitutional changes that would follow. This was coupled
with restrictions on physical movement in several areas with political
leaders of the region also being placed under house arrest.

The lockdown comprised two legal components: The first being orders under
the temporary suspension of telecom services rules (suspension rules),
which enables the central or state government to suspend telecom services
when there is a public emergency or a risk to public safety. The suspension
rules establish a modest review mechanism, requiring a three-member
committee of bureaucrats to meet once, within five days, to determine
whether a suspension order is appropriate. The second component included
orders made under Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code, which enables
magistrates to restrict physical movement in an area in the interest of
public safety.

In deciding this case, the Supreme Court would have been expected to
undertake three tasks. The first was to expound upon the relevant rules and
principles. In this case, the constitutional and statutory provisions — the
suspension rules and Section 144. The Court’s second task was to determine,
based on its conclusions, whether the orders made under the suspension
rules and Section 144 were valid or invalid. The Court’s final task was to
determine what to do if any of the orders were invalid — this would
typically entail the Court setting aside the orders, resulting in them
ceasing to have legal effect.

The Supreme Court performed its first task in a robust way, arriving at a
series of significant findings. The Court held that the right to freedom of
speech and freedom of trade through the medium of internet were
constitutionally protected, implying that only constitutionally authorised
limitations on those rights were acceptable. Any orders made under the
suspension rules would need to be published, even though the rules did not
require publication. A single round of review of suspension orders by the
review committee would not suffice. Rather, a periodic review would need to
be undertaken every seven working days to assess whether the suspension
order remained appropriate or not. The Court also held that Section 144
orders should be published and be accompanied with reasons, enabling
citizens to meaningfully challenge them in the courts.

However, after expounding upon the relevant principles in this way, the
Court abandoned its tasks of deciding whether the suspension orders and
Section 144 orders were valid or invalid, and what consequences would
follow. The 130-page judgment yields no decision on the most important
issue before the Court — whether various components of the communications
lockdown were invalid and should be set aside.

Express Editorial | SC does well to curb state’s untrammelled power to deny
people the internet. Delay in relief in J&K will undermine this verdict

Why did the Court decide not to decide? Two reasons can be inferred from
its judgment. First, the status of the communications lockdown, and the
orders in place that put it into effect, evolved during the course of the
proceedings. The Court was not apprised about precisely which orders were
in place, for what period and when. While the Court lamented the
government’s failure to produce these orders, it did not take the logical
next step of directing the government to produce them.

Second, the Court envisaged that the government should have the first
opportunity of testing the constitutionality of the lockdown following its
decision. For example, a review committee would need to convene within
seven working days to determine which suspension orders should remain
intact and which of them should be withdrawn, based on the principles in
the Court’s judgment.

At first glance, this approach seems perfectly sensible. All governments
need to be put to the test of thinking carefully about the
constitutionality of their own orders before the Court does so. The trouble
in this case is that inertia is highly prejudicial — it has taken the Court
five months to hear and decide on the challenge to the communications
lockdown. If the government now fails to comply with the principles set out
in the Court’s judgment, will it take another five months for the issue to
be decided? By that stage, the damage would already have been done, and it
would be impossible to turn the clock back to award 10 months of freedom to
the millions affected.

Opinion | SC order on internet lockdown in J&K makes right noises but
leaves matters of relief to the future

It is also puzzling that the Court chose to dismiss the petitions rather
than keep them pending to monitor the government’s compliance with its
directions. The Court has deployed the strategy of keeping petitions
pending in dozens of other cases that pale in significance compared to this
one — from the running of the cricket board to red beacon lights on cars.
The inevitable conclusion is that the Court’s decision not to decide on the
validity of the orders giving effect to the lockdown is not just deferral —
it is abdication.

This article first appeared in the print edition on January 16, 2020 under
the title ‘Abdication, not deferral’. Chandrachud is the author of The
Cases that India Forgot. Views are personal.


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