Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 105 of 2004
PETITIONER:
People’s Union for Civil Liberties
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/04/2005
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha, N. Santosh Hegde & B.P. Singh
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
In this writ petition filed under Article 32 of the Constitution
of India, the petitioner is challenging a decision of the first
respondent Union of India appointing the respondent No.2 as a
member of the National Human Rights Commission (the
Commission). The primary basis of the challenge to his
appointment is on the ground that prior to the impugned
appointment the second respondent was holding the post of
Director, Central Bureau of Investigation and was also holding the
post of Vice-President (Asia) Interpol. According to the petitioner,
the appointment of a person who served in the police force as a
Member of the N.H.R.C. is contrary to the provisions of the
Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993, (the Act), apart from being
opposed to the very aims and objects for which the said
Commission was constituted. The petitioner urges that such
appointment would undermine the status and international
recognition of the Commission as an institution for protection of
human rights. It is also urged that the appointment of the second
respondent is also opposed to the Constitution of India on the
grounds that it is arbitrary and violative of Article 14. It is
submitted that it is also violative of international covenants. For
this purpose the petitioner has heavily relied on the principles laid
down in the meeting of representatives of the national institutions
in Paris wherein certain principles were evolved in regard to
protection of human rights which principles came to be known as
"Paris Principles". According to the petitioner, these principles
were subsequently endorsed by the U.N. Commission of Human
Rights and the U.N. General Assembly. The petitioner further
contends that the U.N. Resolution dated 19.12.1993 concerning
national institutions for protection of human rights, the compliance
of the Paris Principles has become mandatory and since the Paris
Principles prohibited the appointment of a civil servant like a
Police Officer to such a Commission, such appointment of the
second respondent would send wrong signals to the international
community as well as to the United Nations. The petitioner also
urges that the appointment of the second respondent has been made
without consulting the Chairperson of the Commission which was
the practice since the inception of the Commission. It is also urged
that such appointment would have a direct impact on the effective
implementation of human rights and fundamental rights enshrined
in the Constitution including the right to life under Article 21.
According to the petitioner, under Section 3 (2) (d) of the Act, two
members of the Commission should have knowledge of, and
practical experience in matters relating to human rights; which
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definition has been defined under section 2(d) of the Act to mean :
"Human Rights means the rights relating to life,
liberty, equality and dignity of the individual
granted by the Constitution or embodied in the
International Covenants and enforceable by Courts
in India."
According to the petitioner, a person who headed a
prosecution agency cannot be taken as a person who has
knowledge of, or practical experience in matters relating to human
rights. The petitioner also urges that the appointment of second
respondent as a member of the Commission could lead to potential
conflict of interest between the CBI and the Commission as the
Commission is often called upon to decide on complaints of
violation of fundamental rights by the CBI and also the police.
According to the petitioner, the appointment of respondent No.2
destroys the independence of the Commission.
The first respondent, Union of India, in its counter opposed
the writ petition contending that the appointment of the second
respondent as a Member of the Commission is in accordance with
the Act and the second respondent is qualified to be a member of
the Commission under the Act. The first respondent contends that
the composition of the Commission is provided under section
3(2)(d) of the Act which provides that a person having knowledge
of and practical experience in matters relating to human rights is
eligible for such appointment. It is further submitted that
respondent No.2 is a distinguished Officer of the Indian Police
Service, having retired as the Director of CBI. It is submitted that
in the course of his career between 1966 and 2003, he has had
occasions to supervise the investigation and prosecution of several
offences including the serious offences against human rights. As an
example the first respondent has stated that as the Director of CBI,
the second respondent was responsible for investigating the
Punjab mass cremation cases and the Gujarat riot cases; both of
which involved serious violation of human rights. It was also
submitted that as an institution, the CBI is often entrusted by this
Court to conduct inquiries into sensitive matters where violation of
human rights is involved and the second respondent has been a part
of such investigations. It is also pointed out by the learned Solicitor
General appearing for the Union of India that the petition does not
make any personal allegation against the second respondent as to
any act of violation of human rights either by him personally or as
being party to such violation. It is also submitted that the second
respondent as the Vice-President (Asia) Interpol has been involved
in developing mechanism in Police cooperation and prosecution of
crimes across borders including terrorism, human safety and
human trafficking which are all offences against human rights. The
first respondent has submitted that there is no illegality in
appointing an Officer of the Indian Police Service as a member of
the Commission. It is further stated that on the contrary, very often
during the course of their careers Police Officers garner vast
practical experience in Police methodology, investigative
techniques and other practical matters relating to human rights
enforcement. It is submitted that such experience would, inter alia,
aid the Commission in identifying the areas of Police malpratices
and the Commission will be able to look behind the causes of
cover-up and attempts to shield the guilty Police Officers.
It is denied that the appointment of second respondent would
send wrong signals to the international community or to the United
Nations. The first respondent states that though on a prior occasion
the Chairperson of the Commission was consulted in regard to the
appointment of a former police officer of the Indian Police Service
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and the said Chairperson had expressed his disagreement on such
appointment, such consultation is not mandatory in all cases; more
so in the background of the fact that statute does not require any
such consultation. Therefore, non-consultation with the
Chairperson of the Commission would not in any manner vitiate
the appointment of the 2nd respondent. The first respondent also
denied the argument advanced by the petitioner that there has been
a violation of Article 14 of the Constitution in the appointment of
the second respondent. Relying on the judgment of this Court in
R.K. Jain v. Union of India, (1993 4 SCC 119), it is submitted that
the judicial review in the matter of appointments is confined to the
area of examining whether the appointee possesses the statutory
qualifications or not and such power of judicial review does not
extend to re-assessing the merit of the particular appointee. It is
also contended that the provisions of the Act are in conformity
with the Paris Principles and neither Paris Principles nor the U.N.
Resolution prohibit a former civil servant or a Police Officer from
becoming a member of the Human Rights Commission. More
importantly, it is submitted that once the Indian Legislature enacts
a law pursuant to an international convention then the legislative
area in that field being covered it is the municipal law alone that
prevails hence, the validity of the appointment of second
respondent can only be examined with reference to the provisions
of the Act.
This petition came up for consideration before a Bench of
two learned Judges of this Court. Since the said two learned Judges
had a difference of opinion in regard to the question involved, by
their reasoned order, they referred the matter to a larger Bench
because of which the matter is now before this Bench of three
Judges.
Having heard learned counsel for the parties and on the basis
of their pleadings and arguments recorded hereinabove, at the
outset we must notice that neither the Paris Principles nor the U.N.
Resolution and much less the Act does either expressly or
impliedly exclude the inclusion of a Police Officer in the
Commission. The argument of the petitioner is that taking into
consideration the object of the Act and the public perception of the
Police as violators of human rights, Section 3 (2) (d) should be so
interpreted to exclude Police Officers from becoming members of
the Commission. We do not think such an interpretation is
permissible when the statute is express in its language. We should
note herein that there is no challenge to the validity of the Act,
therefore, we will have to proceed on the basis that the Act is intra
vires. From the argument of the learned counsel for the petitioners,
the question for consideration is whether Section 3 (2) (d) of the
Act requires any interpretation or a construction which would
exclude Police Officers from becoming member of the
Commission. Section 3(2)(d) which refers to two members to be
appointed to the Commission reads thus :
"two Members to be appointed from amongst persons
having knowledge of, or practical experience in,
matters relating to human rights."
A plain reading of this Section does not give any room for
interpretation because the language is quite clear. In our view it
only means that any two persons having knowledge of, or practical
experience in, matters relating to human rights are eligible to be
Members of the Commission. This clear language of the Section
cannot be distorted by any inference based on any public
perception or prejudice. It is relevant to note herein that this
Section does not exclude any class of persons so long as they have
the knowledge of, or practical experience in, matters relating to
human rights which is a requirement to be satisfied by the
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Selection Committee. In the absence of any clear and specific
exclusionary provision in the statute, the court should plainly treat
it as a general provision instead of delving in search of any
possible hidden or implied exclusion. It was so said in A.R.
Antulay v. Ramdas Sriniwas Nayak & Anr. (1984 2 SCC 500).
While so saying this Court in para 18 of the said judgment held
that "It is a well-established canon of construction that the court
should read the section as it is and cannot rewrite it to suit its
convenience; nor does any canon of construction permit the court
to read the section in such manner as to render it to some extent
otiose. x x x The Legislature provided for both the positive and the
negative. It positively conferred power on Special Judge to take
cognizance of offences and it negatively removed any concept of
commitment. It is not possible therefore, to read Section 8(1) as
canvassed on behalf of the appellant that cognizance can only be
taken upon a police report and any other view will render the
safeguard under Section 5-A illusory."
If we apply the said principle of law to the facts of the case,
there being no exclusion in section 3(2)(d) of the Act and the
language being clear, we cannot by looking back into the Paris
Principles or the U.N. Resolution interpret an exclusionary clause
to keep the Police Officers from being the Members of the
Commission in spite of the Act not providing for the same.
Having dealt with the provisions of the Act in regard to the
qualification of two members to be appointed under section 3(2)(d)
of the Act, we will now refer to the argument of public perception
about the Police about which lengthy arguments supported by
various judgments of the Court have been addressed by the learned
counsel for the petitioner. Learned counsel for the petitioner
submitted that it is a well known fact that Police force all over the
world especially in India are the biggest violators of human rights
hence it would be doing violence to the object of the Act if a Police
Officer is selected as a Member of the Commission. Having very
carefully gone through the entire Statement of Objects and
Reasons of the Act, we do not find that the objects as reflected in
the Act indicate towards a perception of the Police force of the
country as a violator of human rights. Further the objects of the
Act do not envisage an exclusion of the members of any force
from being considered for membership of the Commission.
Learned counsel for the petitioner did place reliance on a number
of reported cases of this Court, in support of his contention that the
judicial and public perception of the Police force in India is such
that the Police force is considered as the biggest violator of
human rights. He relied on the judgment of this Court in Paramjit
Kaur v. State of Punjab & Ors. (1999 2 SCC 131), D.K. Basu etc.
v. State of West Bengal etc. (1997 1 SCC 416), Munshi Singh
Gautam (D) & Ors. v. State of M.P. (2004 10 JT 547), N.C.
Dhoundial v. Union of India & Ors. (2004 2 SCC 579). He also
placed reliance on the report of the National Human Rights
Commission (Annual Report 2001-02 at page 362). Learned
Solicitor General opposing this contention of the petitioner
submitted that the cricism of the Police in the abovesaid judgments
of the Court is based on the facts of each one of those cases and
none of the judgments cited hereinabove has in terms said that the
Police force in India as an institution is a violator of human rights.
He submitted that the Police force has more than 2.2 million
personnel working under various conditions prevailing in different
parts of the country. It is possible that some of them commit
violation of human rights but that would not ipso facto make each
and every police personnel by presumption, a violator of human
rights. Such an inference, according to learned Solicitor General,
would amount to expressing an institutional bias in regard to an
institution which many a times has rendered meritorious service to
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the nation, both in maintaining law and order, investigation of
crimes and facing various other internal and external threats. He
submitted that such a general condemnation of an institution like
the Police force would only demoralise the said force, consequence
of which could be disastrous. In our opinion the learned Solicitor
General has rightly relied on certain passages from the judgment of
this Court in The State of Uttar Pradesh v. Mohammad Naim (AIR
1964 SC 703) wherein this Court had deprecated the practice of
courts making sweeping and general observations against the entire
Police force of a State though the case related to only one Police
Officer. In such a situation, this Court held that such general
remarks were neither justified on the facts of the case nor were
they necessary for disposal of the said case, hence, expunged such
general remarks.
While we cannot take exception in regard to the remarks
made against the Police in each one of the above cases relied on by
the learned counsel for the petitioner, we certainly feel that these
remarks cannot be so generalised as to make every personnel of the
force, consisting of nearly of 2.2 million people, violators of
human rights solely on the ground that out of thousands of cases
investigated and handled by them, in some cases the personnel
involved have indulged in violation of human rights. Learned
counsel for the petitioner, however, contended that the judgments
apart, the public perception of the Indian Police force as a whole is
so poor that it considers the Police as an organisation to be a
violator of human rights. Therefore, selecting a retired police
officer as a member of the Commission would lead to erosion of
confidence of the people in the Commission. We are sincerely
unable to gauge this public perception or its magnitude so as to
import this concept of institutional bias. There are no statistics
placed before this Court to show that there has been any census or
poll conducted which would indicate that a substantial majority of
the population in the country considers the Police force as an
institution which violates human rights nor do we think that by
such generalisations we could disqualify a person who is otherwise
eligible from becoming a member of the commission.
Public displeasure as presently perceived is not confined to
the Police force only. The views expressed in the media very often
show that this displeasure is reflected against many a Department
of the Government including constitutional bodies and if public
displeasure or perception were to be the yardstick to exclude
people from holding constitutional or statutory offices then many
such posts in the country may have to be kept vacant.
Then again what is the yardstick to measure public
perception. Admittedly, there is no barometer to
gauge the perception of the people. In a democracy there
are many people who get elected by thumping majority to high
legislative offices. Many a times public perception of a class of
society in regard to such people may be that they are not desirable
to hold such post but can such a public opinion deprive such
people from occupying constitutional or statutory offices without
there being a law to the contrary ? There is vast qualitative
difference between public prejudice and judicial
condemnation of an Institution based on public perception. At
any rate, as stated above, public perception or public opinion
has no role to play in selection of an otherwise eligible
person from becoming a member of the Commission under the
Act.
A perusal of Section 4 of the Act shows that the appointment
of Chairperson and other members shall be made after obtaining
the recommendations of the Committee consisting of
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? The Prime Minister
? The Speaker of the House of People
? The Minister Incharge of the Ministry of Home Affairs in
the Government of India
? Leader of Opposition in the House of People
? Leader of Opposition in the Council of States
? Deputy Chairman of the Council of States.
Proviso to the above section further stipulates that no sitting
Judge of the Supreme Court or sitting Chief Justice of the High
Court shall be appointed except after consultation with the Chief
Justice of India. There is absolutely no requirement under the Act
that this Committee consisting of such high office holders of this
country should further consult the Chairman of the Commission
before appointing a member. The entire argument of the petitioner
in this regard rests on the fact that on some previous occasion the
Committee did consult the Chairperson of the Commission and in
the present case this was not done. We are in agreement with the
learned Solicitor General on this point that when a statute vests a
function in a Committee comprising of such high dignitaries
holding high constitutional positions, it would be impermissible to
read into the statute the requirement of consultation with the
Chairman of the Commission. The provision for appointment of
Chairperson and other members of the Commission contemplate a
self-contained procedure and no other mandatory provision can be
imported into the Act where none actually exists. The allegation
made by the petitioner in regard to non-consultation with the
Chairman in the appointment of second respondent is vague and
from the counter affidavit filed the same cannot be accepted.
It is nextly argued by the learned counsel for the petitioner
that there was no proper consultation amongst the members of the
Selection Committee. This is based on the fact that one of the
members who was then the leader of the Opposition in the House
of the People did not respond to the intimation sent to him in
regard to the selection of the members since he was in the hospital
at that point of time. A perusal of the Act does not show that there
is any quorum fixed for the selection nor does it provide for any
meeting nor any particular procedure has been provided.
Under the Act, consultation by circulation is
not impermissible. In such a situation, if one out of six
did not respond, it would not vitiate the opinion of the
other five Members. On the contrary sub-clause 2 of section 4
specifically says that no appointment of a Chairperson or a
member shall be invalid merely by reason of any vacancy in the
Committee. In the instant case the Prime Minister, the Speaker of
the House of the People, Minister Incharge of the Ministry of
Home Affairs in the Government of India, Leader of Opposition in
the House of People and Deputy Chairman of the Council of States
having agreed on the appointment of the second respondent, we
find no statutory error in the appointment of the second
respondent.
In the ordinary course the above analysis itself would have
been sufficient to dispose of this petition. However, since this
matter has been referred to this Bench due to the divergence of
views between Hon. Sabharwal and Dharmadhikari, JJ. it is in the
fitness of things that we note their judgments also and particularly
the judgment of Hon. Sabharwal, J. as our conclusions are different
from his conclusions.
In arriving at his decision Hon. Sabharwal, J. has treated the
Paris Principles and the U.N. General Assembly Resolutions as
covenants. Thereafter, he has applied the law applicable to
international covenants and imported the obligations under the
Paris Principles and the U.N. General Assembly Resolution as if
they are binding as legal obligations on India even in the municipal
context. While doing so he has relied upon the judgments of this
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Hon’ble Court in Mackinon Mackenzie v. Audrey D’Costa, AIR
1987 SC 1281; Sheela Barse v. Secretary, Children’s Aid Society,
(1987) 3 SCC 50; PUCL v. UoI, (1997) 3 SCC 433; Vishaka v.
State of Rajasthan, (1997) 6 SCC 241.
Having noted the above we would with respect like to point
out that neither the Paris Principles nor the subsequent U.N.
General Assembly Resolution can be exalted to the status of a
covenant in international law. Therefore merely because India is a
party to these documents does not cast any binding legal obligation
on it. Further, all the above cases which Hon. Sabharwal, J. has
relied upon deal with the obligations of the Indian State pursuant to
its being a party to a covenant/ treaty or a convention and not
merely a declaration in the international fora or a U.N. General
Assembly Resolution.
Apart from the above, the fact that the field in relation to the
constitution of the NHRC is covered by an Act of the Indian
Parliament, it follows that neither the Paris Principles nor the U.N.
General Assembly Resolution can override the express provisions
of the Act. Therefore, we are not in agreement with the decision of
Hon. Sabharwal, J. After considering the views expressed by
Hon. Dharmadhikari, J. on this aspect of the case, we are in
agreement with the same.
For the reasons stated above this petition fails and is
dismissed.