'Personal attacks on judges lead to a dangerous scenario': Supreme Court judge of Nupur Sharma plea

Reportedly, both Justice Pardiwala and Justice Surya Kant were targeted on social media by users after their comments against Sharma during the hearing of her plea.

FPJ Bureau Updated: Sunday, July 03, 2022, 11:23 PM IST
Justice JB Pardiwala | Photo: ANI

Justice JB Pardiwala | Photo: ANI

A judge, who was part of the Supreme Court bench that castigated Nupur Sharma for her comments on Prophet Muhammed, on Sunday made strong remarks about personal attack on judges. "Personal attacks on judges for their judgements lead to a dangerous scenario," said Justice JB Pardiwala, who was part of the bench that said the former BJP spokesperson needs to apologise to the entire, reports NDTV. Both Justice Pardiwala and Justice Surya Kant were targeted on social media by users after their oral comments against Nupur Sharma. In their observations, the judges had also questioned why Nupur Sharma had not been arrested and held her responsible for "igniting emotions across the country".

In his address at a function, Justice Pardiwala said, "Personal attacks on judges for their judgments lead to a dangerous scenario where the judges have to think about what media thinks instead of what the law really thinks. This harms the rule of law. Social and digital media is primarily resorted to expressing personalised opinions more against the judges, rather than a constructive critical appraisal of their judgments. This is what is harming the judicial institution and lowering its dignity. The remedy of judgments does not lie with social media but with higher courts in the hierarchy. Judges never speak through their tongue, only through their judgments. In India -- which cannot be defined as a completely mature or defined democracy -- social media is employed frequently to politicize purely legal and constitutional issues."

He added that digital and social media needs to be regulated throughout the country to preserve the rule of law under the constitution.

"In the modern day context, trials by digital media are an undue interference in process of justice dispensation and cross that Lakshman Rekha many a times."

Justice Pardiwala cited the Ayodhya case as an example, adds the NDTV report. He said, "It was a land and title dispute but by the time the final verdict came to be delivered, the issue attained political overtones. It was conveniently forgotten that someday or the other some judge had to decide the contentious civil dispute which was indisputably the oldest litigation pending in the court of the country running into thousands of pages. This is where the heart of any judicial proceeding before the constitutional court may disappear and the judges deciding the dispute may get a bit shaken, which is antithetic to the rule of law. This is not healthy for the rule of law."

Published on: Sunday, July 03, 2022, 11:23 PM IST

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