By: Shubham Ghosh
The Supreme Court of India on Wednesday (26) asked the Narendra Modi government to file a report on alleged attacks on the country’s Christian institutions and priests as well as the implementation of its earlier guidelines to curb hate crime, something which many allege has seen a rise in India in the times of Modi.
A bench comprising chief justice DY Chandrachud and justices PS Narasimha and JB Pardiwala directed the home ministry to collate a report on the states’ compliance with the court’s guidelines and file the same before it.
The apex court passed the directions after the petitioner’s counsel, senior advocate Colin Gonsalves, said nodal officers have been notified in every district but they are not registering cases, even though hate speeches have been delivered during rallies in states such as Uttar Pradesh and Chhattisgarh and such news appear regularly on television and in newspapers.
Additional solicitor general Aishwarya Bhati opposed the submission made by Gonsalves, saying it is “easy to make sweeping statements”.
The chief justice then said, “Let the MHA (ministry of home affairs) file a reply…. We can keep this after two weeks.”
In 2018, the apex court issued a slew of guidelines for both the Union government and states for dealing with hate crimes. These included fast-track trials, compensation to the victims, deterrent punishment and disciplinary action against lax law-enforcing officials.
The court said offences such as hate crimes, cow vigilantism and lynching should be nipped in the bud.
The states shall designate a senior police officer not below the rank of superintendent of police as the nodal officer for the implementation of the guidelines in each district, the court had said, adding that these officers will set up a task force, to be assisted by an officer of deputy superintendent of police, for taking measures to prevent incidents of mob violence and lynching.
The state governments shall immediately identify the districts, sub-divisions and villages where instances of lynching and mob violence have been reported in the recent past, the court had said.
(With PTI inputs)