Jagdish Sharan
Verma will be best remembered for path-breaking judgments and ideas that have
empowered citizens and enabled the government to overhaul institutions
What do we seek in a Supreme
Court judge? One who must exercise among the widest constitutional
jurisdictions of any Supreme Court in the world: to pass any order that does
“complete justice,” hear, however briefly, petitions against any order from any
court and to decide direct cases on violations of fundamental rights?
The role requires complete
probity, and spine; the courage and the wisdom to interpret rights in ways that
adhere to the law, yet evolve in new directions to distinguish changing
circumstance; and the ability to get things done.
JUDICIAL INNOVATIONS
Justice Verma’s leadership
at the Supreme Court and beyond was based on this character. In his brief
tenure as Chief Justice of India, he sought to institutionalise honesty: in
1997, the Supreme Court adopted the “Restatement of Values of Judicial Life.” A
few months later, Justice Verma passed theVishaka judgment, which made sexual harassment
at the workplace illegal when Parliament failed to do so. It is less widely
known how the bench did this.
Vishaka made clear that the courts could
breathe life into fundamental rights where Parliament had failed to do its job
- because of inattention to rights or regular adjournments — using
international treaties India has signed. Parliament passed a Bill on sexual
harassment 15 years later, with no discussion at all in the Lok Sabha, in large
part because of the Vishaka judgment. During that time, working
women were grateful for the recognition of their “right to work” with “human
dignity,” far from odd patriarchal standards of “modesty” being “outraged.”
Justice Verma’s innovation
of continuing mandamus is now an accepted judicial role, to compel governments
to do what they are legally required but without taking over the function. In
this he urged court restraint, so as not to blur the line between the two. Some
of his decisions have been widely critiqued: the collegium system, for
instance, by which senior Supreme Court judges decide the appointment of other
judges. Also his references to Hindutva, which he later said were
misinterpreted. But it’s a mistake to seek unblemished heroes. How otherwise
would you see yourself reflected, learn to deal with lives and laws that are
themselves imperfect?
Honesty and backbone can
make you inconvenient, especially if you call a spade a spade when it’s being
widely referred to as a pickaxe. Tributes from those in power are pouring forth
now, but many did their best to ignore Justice Verma’s assured constitutional
voice.
Under his chairmanship, the
National Human Rights Commission was one of the first institutions to condemn
the role of the State Government in the 2002 riots. He raised the issue not
just of State inaction in the face of mass murder and rape, but also of the
economic and social ghettoisation of communities. He hired me shortly after as
Officer on Special Duty to the Commission, to help continue some of that work
as he stepped down. I was 26.
ROAD MAP FOR RIGHTS
Eleven years later, when
gusts of equality were blowing down Rajpath, young people stormed the
barricades of a different government, facing beatings and water cannons,
alienated by State inaction on sexual violence, Justice Verma placed the full
weight of his eminence and judicial experience behind them.
The report he produced has
given women and men a contemporary bill of rights, giving flesh to constitutional
gender equality. The Justice Verma Committee also laid out a road map to
achieve those rights. A few sections have found place in the new anti-rape
laws, but the report has been largely ignored. Instead, a rash of death
sentences threatens to make common a standard that was reserved for the “rarest
of rare” crimes.
All evidence shows that this
will not stop the violence — certain justice is a deterrent, extreme sentencing
is not. Citizens were on the streets again this week, unwilling to accept the
rape of another child being badly mishandled, seeing ad hoc reform and little
change. This is an issue that will not blow over. What then can governments,
Central and State, do to give effect to the Verma Committee’s Bill of rights?
There is no magic bullet, but without a criminal justice system that works the
very reason for governance falls open to question.
Implement the laws against
sexual violence: relevant provisions in the Protection of Children from Sexual
Offences Act, the Indian Penal Code and the Criminal Procedure Code should be
converted to plans of action by each agency tasked to implement them, costed by
those agencies and finance and other resources provided. Such exercises are
considered basic in Brazil and South Africa to ensure laws don’t remain largely
on paper.
Pass legal amendments:
Representation of People Act, to disqualify from elections candidates against
whom courts have taken cognisance of charges; Police Acts to enhance efficacy
and accountability; Indian Penal Code, to criminalise sexual violence of men
against men and transgenders; Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, to allow rapes
and sexual violence to be prosecuted in normal courts, outside boys’ club
protections.
Carry out police reforms:
set up security commissions for police in every State and National Security
Commission at the Centre; most have not done this, in spite of a Supreme Court
judgment seven years ago and two benches of Justice Singhvi and Chief Justice
of India Justice Kabir asking States to respond. Fill existing vacancies and
address the gender imbalance in the police forces; amend service and other
rules to recruit, train, promote and penalise public servants based on
attitudes and service records on sexual violence; facilitate FIRs against
police officers who assault or sexually harass citizens, especially survivors
of sexual violence,
Execute plans to increase
the number of courts, judges, court infrastructure, prosecutors and
strengthened legal aid need to be implemented.
Include guidelines and
protocols for medical examination and collection of forensic evidence of sexual
assault survivors in medical school curricula; also protocols for counsellors
and psychologists in the relevant curricula; ,modules on gender in teacher
training curricula and in school curricula.
Set up rape crisis cells and
crisis intervention centres around the country staffed by medical
professionals, police desk, counsellors and a legal desk. Equip public
emergency response systems that work, create safe houses that women and
children can go to escape violence.
Criminal justice may well be
an election issue now. Rather than expressing outrage in Parliament, political
parties at the State and Central levels can roll out plans on what they intend
to do to reduce sexual violence where they are in power, and where they hope to
run for government. But governments can’t and shouldn’t do everything. Families
can end cycles of violence and misogyny passed down from parent to child. Proud
male feminists are already stepping forward, masculinities groups with male
members working on gender equality are being founded. Women are learning to use
the law, also other ways of dealing with discrimination: with humour, with
firmness, with an internalised sense of right and power.
An important leader has
passed. His legacy of ideas has emboldened citizens, his last bequest equips
government to overhaul institutions. Going by previous figures, more than 700
women and girls are likely to be raped in Delhi this year. That number could be
much less. We have a choice.
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