WELCOME TO FRENDZ4M
Wed, Dec 4, 2024, 01:15:02 PM

Current System Time:

Get updatesShare this pageSearch
Telegram | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram Share on Facebook | Tweet Us | WhatsApp | Telegram
 

Forum Main>>General Talk>>News>>

After big digger verdict, Supreme Court to examine UP Gangster Act

Page: 1   
Mr.Love ™User is offline now
PM [1]
Rank : Helper
Status : Super Owner

#1

The Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutional validity of the Uttar Pradesh Gangsters and Anti-Social Activities (Prevention) Act, 1986. This comes just 16 days after the same bench issued nationwide guidelines prohibiting illegal demolitions of properties linked to accused persons.


A bench comprising Justices BR Gavai and KV Viswanathan issued notice to the Uttar Pradesh government in response to a petition filed through advocate Ansar Ahmed Chaudhary. The petition challenges Sections 3, 12, and 14 of the Act under the 2021 regulations that govern the registration of cases, property attachment, investigation, and trial.


The petition argues that the Act violates fundamental rights by allowing the government to act as complainant, prosecutor, and adjudicator. Among the contested provisions, Rule 22 permits filing an FIR based on a single act or omission, making the accused's criminal history irrelevant. The petition claims this undermines due process and breaches protections under Article 20(2) of the Constitution.


The petition added that provisions under the Act also enable the government to confiscate entire properties without adequate judicial oversight.


In its November 13 verdict addressing the misuse of bulldozer actions, the Supreme Court said that executive overreach in demolishing properties of accused persons violates the principles of rule of law.


An executive body cannot act as a judge to punish an individual by demolishing properties, especially without following due process. Such actions are arbitrary and unconstitutional, the bench observed. The court said that punitive demolitions without trial recall "lawless state affairs" where "might is right."


"Only on the basis of the accusations, if the executive demolishes the property/properties of such an accused person without following the due process of law, it would strike at the basic principle of rule of law and is not permissible," the bench said in its 95-page verdict.


"The executive cannot become a judge and decide that a person accused is guilty and, therefore, punish him by demolishing his residential/commercial property/properties. Such an act of the executive would be transgressing its limits," it said.


The Supreme Court bench said the principle that "an accused is not guilty unless proven so in a court of law" is foundational to any legal system.
 

Reply
You are not logged in, please

Login

Page: 1   

Jump To Page:

Keywords:digger, verdict, supreme, examine, gangster, agreed, constitutional, validity, pradesh, gangsters, social, activities, prevention, issued, nationwide,
Related threads:

Who is Aruna Roy, Indian activist on the BBC's 100 Women of the Year 2024 list?


Gandhi brothers head to boiling Sambhal, UP police arrest them in Ghazipur


Three injured after a "shortcut" on Google Maps took them to the UP channel


Gandhi brothers to go to Sambhal, UP police ready to arrest them


What South Korea's martial law would have meant for its citizens


Center to give 95% quota to locals in officer posts posted in Ladakh


South Korea under martial law. This is what it means for its citizens


Surprise in Sambhal violence investigation: Police find 'Pak-made' bullets


CBSE plans to introduce two levels of science and social sciences


UP The groom disappears before the wedding and the bride's family takes him hostage


TERMS & CONDITIONS | DMCA POLICY | PRIVACY POLICY
Home | Top | Official Blog | Tools | Contact | Sitemap | Feed
Page generated in 0.16 microseconds
FRENDZ4M © 2024