NewDelhi: In a major development, the Supreme Court on Tuesday accepted Centre’s petition for an urgent review of its March 20 ruling on the scheduled castes and tribes act and agreed to an open hearing on the matter.
The development came after Attorney General KK Venugopal appealed to the top court, arguing that its previous ruling has led to “dilution” of some stringent provisions of law to prevent atrocities against Dalits.
Attorney General KK Venugopal also stated that the country is today facing an emergency-like situation and the top court’s March 20 ruling on SC/’ST act should be suspended from immediate effect.
The matter is expected to come up for hearing at 2 pm.
The Centre’s decision to move the top court came in the wake of a violent protest by several Dalit outfits across the country against the apex court ruling. At least ten people have died due to the ongoing protest across the country.
Speaking on the issue, Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad has said that the government “differs” with the reasoning given by the apex court judgement “virtually redoing the entire architecture of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act”.
The apex court had on Monday declined urgent hearing on a writ petition filed by All India Federation of SC/ST Organisations against the verdict claiming that the entire nation has witnessed large-scale violence during the ‘Bharat Bandh’.
The top court, however, said the plea would be listed and heard in due course.
On Monday, the Dalit protesters had blocked trains, clashed with police and set on fire several vehicles across several states during a nationwide bandh called to protest against the top court verdict.
In a bid to protect honest public servants discharging bonafide duties from being blackmailed with false cases under the SC/ST Act, the apex court on March 20 diluted its stringent provisions mandating immediate arrest under the law.
The Union government, in its review petition, had said the verdict has “wide ramification and implication resulting in dilution of the stringent provisions of law enacted under the 1989 enactment.
“It (the verdict) adversely affects a substantial portion of the population of India being the members of SC/ST. It is also contrary to the legislative policy of Parliament as reflected in the Prevention Of Atrocities Act 1989,” the Centre said.
Seeking an open court hearing of the review petition, it said that “oral arguments are essential in the present matter in order to assist the court. Further, it would be in the interest of justice that oral arguments be entertained by this court”.
Justifying the petition, the Centre said that despite various measures to improve the socio-economic conditions of the SCs and STs, they still remained vulnerable.
“They are denied a number of civil rights. They are subjected to various offences, indignities, humiliations and harassments. They have, in several brutal incidents, been deprived of their lives and properties, serious crimes are committed against them for various historical, social and economic reasons,” it said.
The Centre said that the Section 18 of the Act is the backbone as it enforces an inherent deterrence and instills a sense of protection amongst members of SCs and STs and any “dilution thereof would shake the very objective of mechanism to prevent offences of atrocities”.
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