SC to examine if protests permitted when matter is sub-judice
October 04, 2021  17:24
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The Supreme Court Monday said it would examine if organisations or individuals who have moved Constitutional court challenging the validity of a legislation are permitted to hold protest on the same issue when the matter is sub-judice. 

 While hearing a plea filed by a farmers' body which is protesting against the three new farm laws and is seeking directions to authorities to allow it to stage satyagrah' at Jantar Mantar in Delhi, the apex court asked what are they protesting for when it has already stayed these legislations. 

 A bench of Justices A M Khanwilkar and C T Ravikumar also asked the organisation, which has already challenged the validity of the three laws before the Rajasthan High Court, why they want to hold protest when they are not in force at all. 

"You want to go for protest. Protest on what? There is no Act in place at the moment. It is stayed by this court. The government has assured that they will not give effect to it, then protest for what," the court observed. 

 The bench asked Attorney General K K Venugopal that once a party has approached the court challenging the validity of the Act, then where is the question of going for protest. 

"They can't ride two horses at the same time," said Venugopal and also referred to the unfortunate incident at Lakhimpur Kheri on Sunday in which eight people were killed in the violence that erupted during a farmers' protest. The bench said when such incidents happen, nobody takes the responsibility.
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