A Bench of Justices J.S. Khehar and C. Nagappan asked the writer to have no fear and appear before the High Court on January 25 in response to the notice by a single judge. “Now we are there,” Justice Khehar observed.
The Bench admitted her plea along with the bail petition of Professor Saibaba, a paraplegic lodged in the infamous ‘Anda’ cell of the Nagpur prison on the allegation that he had Maoist links.
It directed the Maharashtra government and the HC to respond in two weeks.
Opposition must in democracy: Roy
C.U. Singh, senior advocate and counsel for Ms. Roy, argued in the Supreme Court on Friday that contents of her article, published in an English magazine on May 9 last year, only revealed the author’s personal anguish at the plight of wheelchair-bound Professor G.N. Saibaba, who is 90 per cent disabled and suffers from a degenerative medical condition that required constant medical care.
She contended there was no “game plan” or “mala fide motive” to interfere in the administration of justice on behalf of the Delhi University professor, lodged in the infamous ‘Anda’ cell of the Nagpur prison on the allegation that he had Maoist links.
“By criticising the actions or the lack thereof, of the legislature, the judiciary or the executive, a citizen is merely exercising his or her fundamental right to express ‘Opposition’ to the government or one of its wings… Opposition is sacrosanct and indispensable to the functioning of democracy, and more so to that of a democratic welfare State,” Ms. Roy said, opposing the December 23, 2015 criminal contempt notice issued by the Bombay High Court.
The Bench, however, declined Mr. Singh’s plea to exempt Ms. Roy from appearing before the single judge on January 25 as passions were whipped up against her.
“Why should she have any fear of going to court on Monday? We are there, we have appreciated the arguments made by you, we have thought about it carefully, applied our minds... Go appear in court,” observed Justice Khehar.
HAPPY Mahatma Gandhi Birth Anniversary