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Polity: Fundamental Rights

  • Categories
    Polity
  • Published
    23-Dec-2019

Press Freedom of India

Context

Journalists in Kashmir staged a silent demonstration in Srinagar to protest the communication blockade in Kashmir.

About

  • After the scrapping of Special Status and re-organisation of Jammu and Kashmir, it is being reported in certain sections of media that Journalists are facing increased curbs to perform their professional duties.
  • Anuradha Bhasin, editor of Kashmir Times, local English daily filed a petition in the Supreme Court challenging the restrictions on Media in Jammu and Kashmir.
  • New Delhi amended Article 370 of the Indian constitution and bifurcated the state into two union territories on August 5.
  • The move stripped J&K of its separate flag and constitution. Fearing reprisals, the authorities imposed strict restrictions and a communication blockade across the Valley. Though restrictions were eased last month, the communication blockade is still in force.

Situation In India

  • Facing criticism, the government set up a make-shift media communication center at a private hotel in Srinagar for journalists.
  • The center has one internet connection and nine terminals where journalists working with international, national and local media houses have to wait in a queue for their turn to send reports and check mails.
  • The information department managing the center has allotted 15 minutes for each journalist to access the internet.
  • India has dropped two places on a global press freedom index -2019 to be ranked 140th out of 180countries brought about by Reporters Without Borders.
  • The World Press Freedom Index 2019 finds an increased sense of hostility towards journalists across the world.
  • The violent attacks in India leading to at least six Indian journalists being killed in the line of their work in 2018
  • Violence against journalists including police violence, attacks by Maoist fighters and reprisals by criminal groups or corrupt politiciansis one of the most striking characteristics of the current state of press freedom in India.
  • Indian journalists, especially those working for non-English-language media outlets in rural areas, face threats to their lives on a daily basis.

Analysis of Reporters Without Border Report

  • South Asia in general features poorly on the index.
  • Pakistan and Bangladesh rank below India at 142 and 150 respectively.
  • The number of countries regarded as safe, where journalists can work in complete security, continues to decline, while authoritarian regimes continue to tighten their grip on the media, RSF concludes.
  • Norway is ranked first in the 2019 Index for the third year running while Finland has taken second place.An increase in cyber-harassment caused Sweden (third) to lose one place.

Article 35 (A)

Context

The Union Home Ministry decided to move in 10,000 additional troops to Kashmir, which has amplified apprehensions on the ground about the removal of the Article 35A and Article 370, the two constitutional provisions that give the state its distinct identity within the Union of India.

About

What is Article 35A?

  • It is a Constitutional provision, which strengthened J&K Legislature to decide who all are ‘permanent residents’ of the State.
  • It also confers on them special rights and privileges in public sector jobs, acquisition of property in the State, scholarships and other public aid and welfare.

Background

  • Article 35A was incorporated through a Presidential Order, the Constitution (Application to J&K) Order of 1954. Therefore, it was added without undergoing the procedure for constitutional amendments as laid down in Article 368.
  • The Presidential Order was issued in exercise of the power conferred under Article 370 (1) (d) of the Constitution. Whether such power also extends to inserting a new Article in the Constitution is contentious.
  • The ‘classification’ created by this article has to be tested on the principle of equality as it treats non-permanent residents of J&K as ‘second-class’
  • Such persons are not eligible for employment under the State government and are also debarred from contesting elections.

Arguments in support of 35A

  • Maintains unity of J&K: This article safeguards the uniqueness of the J&K. Even other states like Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand also have the laws in which no outsider from the state can buy a land.
  • Striking down Article 35A: It will have various consequences on other constitutional amendments contained in the 1954 Presidential Order. And this can erode the autonomy of J&K.
  • Demography of J&K: Scrapping Article 35A would allow people from outside J&K to settle in the state and acquire land and property, and the right to vote, thus altering the demography of the state.
  • Other Presidential Orders: If the article 35A is scrapped, other Presidential orders may then become susceptible to legal challenges.
  • Federalism: Scrapping Article 35A would violate Article 370 as well as the instrument of accession. The Indian constitution purposefully mandates differential treatments for different units of the Indian Union.
  • North-Eastern states: The removal of Article 35A would also indirectly impact the special provision bestowed upon Mizoram, Nagaland etc. under Article 371.

Issues Related to Article 35A

  • By-passes Article 368: The parliamentary route of law-making was bypassed under the Article 368 (i) when the President incorporated Article 35A into the Constitution. This article empowers only Parliament to amend the Constitution.
  • Against Unity:Article 35 A is against the “very spirit of oneness of India” as it creates a “class within a class of Indian citizens”. As this article restricts citizens from other States from getting employment or buying property within Jammu and Kashmir is a violation of fundamental rights under Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution.
  • Right to Unity: Article 35A protects certain provisions of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution, which restrict the basic right to property if a native woman marries a man not holding a permanent resident certificate. Her children are denied a permanent resident certificate, thereby considering them illegitimate.
  • Deny of opportunity: Meritorious students are denied scholarships and they cannot even seek redress in any court of law.
  • Rights of Pakistani Refugees: This article undermines the rights of West Pakistan refugees. Persons who migrated from Pakistan to India in 1947 have been denied the permanent resident status of J&K.
  • Promotes Separatism: This article has catalysed in radicalization and ghettoization and aids separatist ideology.
  • Human Rights: It grossly undermines the well-being of Pakistani Refugees and Indian Citizens outside of the state. It also undermines their faith in the goodness of India as well as its impartial judicial system.
  • Hampers Growth: Article 35A also adversely affects the economic development of the state.

Way Ahead

  • This matter requires the active participation of all stakeholders. It is necessary to give confidence to the residents of J&K that any alteration in status quo will not take away their rights but will boost J&K’s prosperity as it will open doors for more investment, resulting in new opportunities.
  • Political parties should refrain from inflaming popular passions on these sensitive issues.
  • There is a need to adopt a humane approach as far as solving the problems of permanent residence certificate faced by West Pakistan refugees.

Article 370

Context

The Government has informed Parliament that “no foreign government or organisation has any locus standi” in repealing Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) as matters relating to the Constitution of India are internal and only for the Indian Parliament to deal with.

About

Article 370

  • According to the Constitution of India, Article 370 provides temporary provisions to the J&K, granting it special autonomy. The article says that the provisions of Article 238, which was omitted from the Constitution in 1956 when Indian states were reorganized, shall not apply to the state of Jammu and Kashmir.
  • When India became independent, the state of J&K was not part of its territory. Following a tribal invasion by (North-West Frontier Province) NWFP raiders on 22nd October 1947, Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, Hari Singh, asked for troops from India to assist.
  • In turn of getting assistance from India, the instrument of accession was signed. However, it was limited to Defence, External Affairs, Communications, and some other issues, with respect to which the Indian legislature could make laws for J&K.

Salient features

  • Parliament has very limited jurisdiction in case of J&K. Residuary powers rest with J&K. The Parliament has no power to legislate Preventive Detention laws for the state; only the state legislature has the power to do so.
  • Centre has no power to declare financial emergency under Article 360 in J&K. It can declare emergency in the state only in case of war or external aggression. The Union government can therefore not declare emergency on grounds of internal disturbance or imminent danger unless it is made at the request or with the concurrence of the state government.
  • Part IV (dealing with Directive Principles of the State Policy) and Part IVA (dealing with Fundamental Duties) of the Constitution are not applicable to J&K. In addition to other fundamental rights, Articles 19(1)(f) and 31(2) of the Constitution are still applicable to J&K; i.e., the Fundamental Right to property is still guaranteed in this state.
  • The High Court of J&K has limited powers as it can’t declare any law unconstitutional. Under Article 226 of the Constitution, it cannot issue writs except for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
  • Urdu is the official language of the state
  • Certain special rights have been granted to the permanent residents of J&K with regard to employment under the state, acquisition of immovable property in the state, settlement in the state, and scholarship and other forms of aid as the state government may provide.
  • J&K citizens have an implicit dual citizenship, i.e., though there is no specific provision of dual citizen, there are certain rights that only an original resident of Kashmir enjoy. Even the voters’ lists for State elections and for Parliament elections are not common.

Consequences of Article 370

  • It bars the people from outside the state to buy immovable and movable property here, set any industry or manufacturing unit, while no other state bars any state subject of J&K to invest there, acquire land or set business establishment.
  • It act as obstacle in attracting the flow of investment from big business houses which are running mega projects and giving employment to thousands of educated youth according to their academic, professional, skilled, and non-skilled capabilities.
  • Due to this lack of job avenues to the educated unemployed youth of state is forcing them to move out to other states for finding suitable source of bread earning. If this silent migration of youth continues, it will convert the state into a land of old and aged people in next 15-20 years, which is indeed a very serious matter and need to be taken note of by the government.
  • Unemployment in J&K has promoted militancy. A poor youth after completing education with limited resources, after sitting idle for long, gets easily lured by the people who push them into anti-national activities by giving few thousands of rupees.
  • It is a source of gender bias in disqualifying women from the State of property rights.
  • It was and is about providing space, in matters of governance, to the people of a State who felt deeply vulnerable about their identity and insecure about the future. It was about empowering people, making people feel that they belong, and about increasing the accountability of public institutions and services.
  • It is synonymous with decentralization and devolution of power, phrases that have been on the charter of virtually every political party in India.

Fundamental Rights

Part III of the Indian Constitution consisting of Article 12 to 35 deals with Fundamental Rights. Part III of the Constitution is called the Cornerstone of the Constitution (Sajjan Singh v. State of Rajasthan) together with Part IV (Directive Principles of State Policy) as the ‘Conscience of the Constitution’.

Features of Fundamental Rights

  • Some of them are available only to the citizens while others are available to all persons whether citizens, foreigners or legal persons like corporations or companies.
  • The Constitution confers the following rights and privileges on the citizens of India (and denies the same to aliens):
    • Right against discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth (Article 15).
    • Right to equality of opportunity in the matter of public employment (Article 16).
    • Right to freedom of speech and expression, assembly, association, movement, residence and profession (Article 19).
    • Cultural and educational rights (Articles 29 and 30).
  • They are not absolute but qualified.
  • Some of them are negative in character.
  • They are justiciable, allowing persons to move the courts for their enforcement, if and when they are violated.
  • They are not sacrosanct or permanent.
  • Most of them are directly enforceable (self-executory) while a few of them can be enforced on the basis of a law made for giving effect to them. Such a law can be made only by the Parliament and not by state legislatures so that uniformity throughout the country is maintained (Article 35).

Classification of Fundamental Rights:

All the Fundamental Rights have been classified under the following six categories:

  1. Right to Equality (Art. 14-18)
  2. Right to Freedom  (Art. 19-22)
  3. Right against Exploitation (Art. 23-24)
  4. Right to Freedom of Religion (Art. 25-28)
  5. Cultural and Educational Rights (Art. 29-30)
  6. Right to Constitutional Remedies (Art. 32)

The right to property was deleted from the list of Fundamental Rights by the 44th Amendment Act, 1978. It is made a legal right under Article 300-A in Part XII of the Constitution.

Article 12: Defines State (As used in FRs) which includes:

  • The Government and Parliament of India,
  • The Government and legislatures of the states,
  • All local authorities and
  • Other authorities in India or under the control of the Government of India.

Article 13: Laws inconsistence with FRs

  • Provides shield to FRs by declaring that all laws, which are inconsistent with or in derogation of any of the Fundamental Rights, shall be void to the extent of their inconsistency.
  • Here the terms law includes ordinance, order, bye-law, rule, regulation, notification, custom or usage.
  • Thus, Article 13 imposes an obligation on the State to respect and implement the Fundamental Rights and provides the Judiciary the Judicial Review power.

Article 14: Equality before the Law or the Equal Protection of Law

  • It says that state shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India.
  • Two aspects are there:
  • Equality Before Law: A negative concept, where no man is above law. It ensures juristic equality under the constitution. Equality is antithetic to arbitrariness. Equality and arbitrariness are sworn, enemies.
  • But certain exceptions to it are, the president of India, state governors, Public servants, Judges, Foreign diplomats, etc., who enjoy immunities, protections, and special privileges.
  • Equal Protection of Law: A positive concept, which says that law(s) shall be applied equally among individuals who are placed equally. It means like should be treated alike.

 Rule of Law

  • The guarantee of Equality before Law is a concept of Rule of Law which originated in England.
  • It means no man is above law and that every person, whatever be his rank or status is subject to the jurisdiction of ordinary courts.
  • It also says that no person shall be subject to harsh, uncivilized or discriminatory treatment even for the sake of maintaining law and order.
  • There are three attributes to the Rule of Law:
    • Absence of arbitrary powers (supremacy of law).
    • Equality before law – No one is above law.
    • The Constitution is the Supreme Law of the land and all laws passed by the legislature must be consistent with the provisions of the Constitution.

Article 15: Prohibition of discrimination on the grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth

  • This says that the state shall not discriminate against only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth or any of them.
  • No citizen shall, on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth or any of them, be subject to any disability, restriction or condition with regard to:
  • Access to shops, public restaurants, hotels, and places of public entertainment;
  • The use of wells, tanks, bathing ghats, roads and places of public resort maintained wholly or partly out of State funds or dedicated to the use of the general public.

Exceptions

There are three exceptions to this general rule of non-discrimination:

  • The state is permitted to make any special provision for women and children.
  • The state is permitted to make any special provision for the advancement of any socially and educationally backward classes of citizens or for the scheduled castes and scheduled tribes.
  • The state is empowered to make any special provision for the advancement of any socially and educationally backward classes of citizens or for the scheduled castes or the scheduled tribes regarding their admission to educational institutions including private educational institutions, whether aided or unaided by the state, except the minority educational institutions. The last provision was added by the 93rd Amendment Act of 2005.

Article 16: Equality of Opportunity in matters of Public Employment

  • It provides for equality of opportunity for all citizens in matters of employment or appointment to any office under the State.
  • No citizen can be discriminated against or be ineligible for any employment or office under the State on grounds of only religion, race, caste, sex, descent, place of birth or residence.

Exceptions  

  • Parliament can prescribe residence as a condition for certain employment or appointment in a state or union territory or local authority or other authority. As the Public Employment (Requirement as to Residence) Act of 1957 expired in 1974, there is no such provision for any state except Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.
  • The State can provide for reservation of appointments or posts in favor of any backward class that is not adequately represented in the state services.
  • A law can provide that the incumbent of an office related to religious or denominational institution or a member of its governing body should belong to the particular religion or denomination.

Article 17: Abolition of Untouchability

  • It abolishes “untouchability” and its practice in any form is made an offence punishable under the law.
  • The enforcement of any disability arising out of untouchability shall be an offense punishable by law.
  • Untouchability: not to be understood in its literary or grammatical sense and to be understood as the practice as it has developed historically.
  • It’s an absolute right which means there is no exception attached to this article.

Article 18: Abolition of Titles

  • No title, not being a military or academic distinction, shall be conferred by the State.
  • No citizen of India shall accept any title from any foreign state.
  • No person who is not a citizen of India shall, while he holds any office of profit or trust under the State, accept without the consent of the President any title from any foreign State.
  • No person holding any office of profit or trust under the State shall, without the consent of the President, accept any present emolument or office of any kind from or under any foreign State.

Right to Freedom: Article 19 to 22

Article 19: Article 19 guarantees to all citizens the six rights and they are as follows:

  1. Right to freedom of speech and expression.
  2. Right to assemble peaceably and without arms.
  3. Right to form associations or unions or co-operative societies.
  4. Right to move freely throughout the territory of India.
  5. Right to reside and settle in any part of the territory of India.
  6. Right to practice any profession or to carry on any occupation, trade or business.
  • These six rights are protected against only state action and not private individuals.
  • The State can impose ‘reasonable’ restrictions on the enjoyment of these six rights only on the grounds mentioned in Article 19 itself and not on any other grounds.

Restrictions

  • The State can impose reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the freedom of speech and expression on the grounds of sovereignty and integrity of India, security of the state, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, decency or morality, contempt of court, defamation, and incitement to an offence.

Article 20: Protection in Respect of Conviction for Offences

  • It grants protection against arbitrary and excessive punishment to an accused person, whether citizen or foreigner or a legal person like a company or a corporation. It contains three provisions in that direction:
    • No ex-post-facto law- This limitation is imposed only on criminal laws and not on civil laws or tax laws.
    • No double jeopardy
    • No self-incrimination- The protection against self-incrimination extends to both oral evidence and documentary evidence. However, it does not extend to (i) compulsory production of material objects, (ii) compulsion to give thumb impression, specimen signature, blood specimens, and (iii) compulsory exhibition of the body.

Article 21: Protection of Life and Personal Liberty

  • It declares that no person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to the procedure established by law.
  • According to the Menaka case, the protection under Article 21 should be available not only against arbitrary executive action but also against arbitrary legislative action.
  • It must be noted here that Right to life does not include Right to Die or Right to get killed, eg., mercy killing
  • Giving the widest interpretation to Article 21, the Supreme Court has declared the following rights as fundamental rights within the scope of Article 21:
    • Right to education
    • Right to health
    • Right to environment
    • Right to shelter
    • Right to privacy
    • Right to a speedy trial
    • Right of the prisoners
    • Right to legal aid
    • Right against cruel and unusual punishment
    • Right not to be subjected to bonded labour
    • Right to travel abroad
    • Right against solitary confinement
    • Right against handcuffing

Right to Education (Article 21-A):

  • It asks the state to provide free and compulsory education to all children between the ages of 6 to 14 years.
  • In the same way, the Supreme Court has also held that Freedom of speech and expression guaranteed under Article 19(1) includes the right to know, right to information and right to reply.

Article 22: Protection against arrest and detention

  • Article 22 grants protection to persons under both kinds of detention namely, punitive and preventive.
  • Punitive detention is to punish a person for an offence committed by him after trial and conviction in a court. Preventive detention, on the other hand, means detention of a person without trial and conviction by a court.
  • If a person is arrested after committing a crime, it is called punitive detention.
  • Article 22 provides the following protection against such detention.
    • Right to be informed of the ground of arrest.
    • Right to consult and be defended by a lawyer.
    • Right to be produced before a magistrate within 24 hours of his arrest (excluding the time of journey).
    • Right not to be detained for more than 24 hours without the authority of a magistrate.

Safeguards against preventive detention:

  • If the detention is for more than 3 months the matter must be referred to an advisory board in which there shall be a High Court judge.
  • The detention may be continued only where the advisory board considers that there are sufficient grounds for further detention.
  • Grounds of detention must be communicated to the detenu.
  • The detenu must be given an opportunity to make a representation against the order of detention.

Rights against Exploitation: Article 23 & 24

Article 23: Prohibition of Traffic in human beings and forced labour

  • It prohibits traffic in human beings, begar (forced labour) and other similar forms of forced labour.
  • Parliament has enacted the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956 and the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act 1976 to punish for such traffic.

Exception

  • It permits the State to impose compulsory service for public purposes, as for example, military service or social service, for which it is not bound to pay.
  • However, in imposing such service, the State is not permitted to make any discrimination on grounds only of religion, race, caste or class.

Article 24: Prohibition of employment of children in Factories, etc.

  • It prohibits the employment of children below the age of 14 years in any factory, mine or other hazardous activities like construction work or railway.
  • But it does not prohibit their employment in any harmless or innocent work.

Right to Freedom of Religion: Article 25 – 28

Article 25: Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion

  • It says that all persons are equally entitled to freedom of conscience and the right to freely profess, practice and propagate religion.
  • The implications of these are:
  1. Freedom of conscience
  2. Right to profess
  3. Right to practice
  4. Right to propagate

Religious Conversions

  • As per the SC, the Right to Propagate does not include the right to convert.
  • Though voluntary conversion is permitted under Art 25 and laws can be made against forced conversion as in the case of M.P., Orissa, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu which have legislated making forced conversion a penal offence.

Article 26: Freedom to manage religious affairs

  • This article allows every religious denomination or a section of it to establish and maintain institutions for religious and charitable purposes and manage their religious affairs.
  • They can also acquire and own movable and immovable properties and administer such properties in accordance with the law.

Article 27: Freedom from payment of taxes for promotion of any particular religion

  • It prohibits the state to impose tax proceeds of which are meant for payment of promotion or maintenance of any particular religion.
  • It means that the state cannot raise a religious tax and also that the state cannot spend its secular taxes on any particular religion as it would go against its secular character.

Article 28: Freedom from attendance of religious instructions or worship in educational institutions:

  • Educational institutions wholly maintained by state funds are prohibited from imparting religious instructions.
  • However, an institution established by a trust but administered by the state can impart religious instructions. But in these institutions, no person can be compelled to attend these instructions.

Educational and Cultural Rights: Article 29 and 30

Article 29: Protection of Interests of Minorities

  • It provides that any section of the citizens residing in any part of India having a distinct language, script or culture of its own, shall have the right to conserve the same.
  • Article 29 grants protection to both religious minorities as well as linguistic minorities.

Article 30: Right of Minorities to Establish and Administer Educational Institutions

  1. It grants the following rights to minorities, whether religious or linguistic:
  2. All minorities shall have the right to establish and administer educational institutions of their choice.
  3. The compensation amount fixed by the State for the compulsory acquisition of any property of a minority educational institution shall not restrict or abrogate the right guaranteed to them. This provision was added by the 44th Amendment Act of 1978 to protect the right of minorities in this regard. The Act deleted the right to property as a Fundamental Right (Article 31).
  4. In granting aid, the State shall not discriminate against any educational institution managed by a minority.

Right to Property and Saving of Certain Laws: Article 31

Article 31: Abolition of right to property

  • The Constitution (44th Amendment) Act, 1978 omitted Article 19(1)(f) (Right to acquire, held hold and dispose of property), and shifted the provision in Article 31 (no person shall be deprived of his property except by law) to another article viz. Article 300-A.
  • The effect of this change is that the right to property is no more a fundamental right.
  • Thus the Right to property though still a constitutional right is not a fundamental right.
  • If this right is infringed the aggrieved person cannot access the Supreme Court directly under Article 32.

Right to Constitutional Remedies: Article 32

  • It is the very soul of the Constitution and the very heart of it.
  • The Supreme Court has ruled that Article 32 is a basic feature of the Constitution.
  • These writs are borrowed from English law where they are known as ‘prerogative writs’.
  • The Supreme Court shall have the power to issue directions or orders or writs for the enforcement of any of the fundamental rights. The writs issued may include habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, certiorari and quo warranto.

Habeas Corpus

  • Means: “to have the body of”
    • Issued to a person or jailer or authority who has illegally detained another person in jail to produce the detainee before the court.
    • Issued in order to let the court know on what grounds he has been confined and justify the ‘day and cause’ of his detention.
  • It is the most effective means to check the arbitrary arrest by any executive authority and protect individual liberty.
  • Habeas Corpus is a prerogative writ; available to all aggrieved persons alike. The aggrieved person or any other person on behalf of aggrieved can approach the court for the issuance of this writ.

Mandamus

  • Mandamus means: ‘We Command’.
    • Issued to governmental or semi-governmental or judicial bodies: inferior court, tribunal, board, corporation or person requiring performance of a specific duty fixed by law.
  • The writ can be issued only to enforce mandatory legal duty, not a discretionary function
  • It cannot be issued to a private individual.

 Certiorari

  • The Order is issued by a superior court to an inferior court or tribunal to transmit the records of a case or matter pending before them.
  • If the order of inferior court is found to be without jurisdiction or against the principles of natural justice, it is quashed.
  • Its object is secure that the jurisdiction of an inferior court or tribunals is properly exercised.
  • Unlike Habeas Corpus, it should be utilized only by the person aggrieved, not by any other person.

Prohibition

  • Issued by the Supreme Court or a High Court to an inferior court, forbidding it from continuing proceedings on a case which falls outside its jurisdiction.
  • Prohibition is available only when the inferior court or tribunal has not yet made a decision. Certiorari can be issued even after the court or tribunal has made a decision.
  • Prohibition wholly concerns with matters of jurisdictional defects, whereas Certiorari is only substantially concerned with such defects.
  • The remedies under both Prohibition and Certiorari lie against a judicial or quasi-judicial body, not against an executive body.

 Quo Warranto

  • Means: “by what authority”.
  • Issued when any private person wrongfully usurps a public office.
  • It is to enquire into the legality of the claim which a person asserts.
  • The person applying for this writ must show the interest he has in the office with reference to which he seeks the remedy.

Article 33

  • The Parliament can restrict or abrogate, by law, FR’s in the application to:
    • The members of Armed forces, Paramilitary Forces, police forces, intelligence agencies.
    • The forces charged with the maintenance of public order.
    • A parliamentary law enacted under Article 33 can also exclude the Court Martials (tribunals established under the Military law) from the writ jurisdiction of the SC and HC, so far as the enforcement of the Fundamental Rights is concerned.

Article 34

  • While Martial Law is in force in any area, the FRs can be restricted.
  • The Supreme Court held that the declaration of martial law does not ipso facto result in the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.

Article 35

  • Article 35 lays down that the power to make laws, to give effect to certain specified fundamental rights shall vest only in the Parliament and not in the state legislatures.

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