Justice Ruma Pal, Open Magazine on difference between Courts & Tribunals
Delivering
the fifth V.M. Tarkunde memorial lecture, former Supreme Court judge
Ruma Pal described the increasing tribunalisation (the executive
decision to set up specialised tribunals) as a serious encroachment on
the judiciary's independence. The judiciary, she said, had been
"timorous" in not fighting these tribunals that force it to share its
adjudicating powers with the executive.
After having succeeded in
softening Parliamentary function by giving post retirement contracts to
former IAS
officers who have been made Secretary Generals of Lok Sabha and Rajya
Sabha by sidelining officials of the Parliament, judicial function is
facing consistent mutilation through tribunalisation. Sadly, both the
bar and the bench appears structurally complicit in it.
Government
is asking us to believe that what 24
High Courts and over 600 District Courts and thousands of magistrates in
remote parts of the country could not do, tribunals like NGT with its
five benches can do it. Only the gullible, the beneficiary and the
vested interests will believe it. Likes of Justice Ruma Pal and Madhya
Pradesh Bar Association have rightly challenged such myth making.
Collusion, complicity, connivance and incestous institutions manifest
themselves in myriad ways.
The OPEN magazine
article below by Prashant Reddy underlines that the 17th Law Commission
took care to use the term `courts' and not `tribunals' in the context of
the Indian Constitution. His four and half page analysis of the ongoing
tribunalisation enriches the debate on the constitutionality of
Tribunals.
This piece deserves
considered responses, given the fact that at least two PILs are pending
in Supreme Court challenging the constitutionality of the NGT.
OPEN magazine deserves appreciation for continuing with its expose from Radia Tapes to Tribunal saga.
How NGT is disrupting ongoing legal process is illustrated by a text here:
http://www.toxicswatch.org/ 2013/01/justice-continues-to- be-delayed-for.html
--
Gopal Krishna