Dhananjay Mahapatra, TNN Apr 13, 2012, 12.28 AM IST
NEW DELHI: Chief Justice of India (CJI) S H Kapadia on
Thursday said a very good law like Right to Information (RTI) was being misused
to ask irrelevant and intrusive questions seriously impeding the working of the
Judges and the Supreme Court.
When a bench of CJI and Justices D K Jain, S S Nijjar, R P
Desai and J S Khehar were deliberating on reporting guidelines of sub-judice
matters, Justice Kapadia said, "In RTI matters, since I took over as CJI,
I have given answers to all questions except very few things. But the kind of
questions and their number is also exceeding limit."
He gave samples of the irrelevant questions that were being
put to the Judges taking away their precious time which could have been
utilized in studying petitions and case materials. "Why did you attend
Nani Palkhivala Lecture? What time did you leave? Did you eat lunch or had tea?
Which lawyer invited you for the function? We are working hard but we are not being
able to concentrate many a times because these kinds of questions," the
CJI said.
"Are these questions relevant for press? It is all
going beyond all limits. The RTI Act is a good law but there has to a limit to
it," he added.
During the deliberations on reporting guidelines, the court
asked senior advocate Anil Divan whether the Nariman Committee recommendations
or the self-regulatory mechanism in News Broadcasters Association had
provisions to deal with the problem of 'paid news'.
"If in the case of paid news comes before the
association what steps would it take? What steps are prescribed in the
self-regulatory mechanism? We are all for open court system. But we want to
know if in a given case the court comes to a conclusion that reporting had vitiated
fair trial and prejudiced the accused, what preventive steps are to be
taken?" the bench asked.
The CJI took the lead in formulating the questions and said
the court need not be misunderstood for this as it was coming across examples
frequently relating to reporting on sub-judice matters. "Take for example
today's article in The Hindu about Presidential Reference referring to it as
'all lies'," he said.
"The reference may not be sub-judice but it is coming
to the court and the newspaper analyses all issues. How do we control such kind
of things? Is it not interference in the administration of Justice? We are only
asking to understand what should be done in such cases. Without saying whether
it is right or wrong, we are giving the examples to get assistance from the
counsel," Justice Kapadia said.
Divan, concluding his arguments, said he was still
uncomfortable about framing of mandatory guidelines by the court as it would
give a handle to accused and other vested interests would give various
interpretations to the guidelines and rush to court seeking ban or postponement
of reporting.
Senior advocate T R Andyarujina, assisting the court as
amicus, said the US Supreme Court allows its proceedings to be telecast live
thus leaving very little scope for misreporting by media. He said in India
Parliament under its Privilege Rules could punish journalists for misreporting.
"But in last 20 years, the Privileges Committee has only censured the
erring ones and never punished them," he said. The arguments would
continue on Tuesday.
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