City
Epaper

Delhi protests: SC to hear plea after violence stops

By ANI | Updated: December 16, 2019 12:00 IST

The Supreme Court on Monday said that it will not take suo motu cognizance of the petition filed against protests in the national capital until "violence and destruction of public properties" stops.

Open in App

The Supreme Court on Monday said that it will not take suo motu cognizance of the petition filed against protests in the national capital until "violence and destruction of public properties" stops.

"Let the rioting stop. Public property is being destroyed. The court can't do anything right now. We will determine the rights but not in the atmosphere of riots. Let this stop and then we will take suo motu cognizance. If protests violence and destruction of public properties continues, we will not hear it. Come back tomorrow," a bench headed by Chief Justice of India SA Bobde, said.

The matter was mentioned before the bench by senior advocate Indira Jaising in the backdrop of violent protests which erupted in Delhi's Jamia Millia Islamia University and Aligarh Muslim University yesterday over newly enacted Citizenship (Amendment) Act.

Jaising requested the apex court to take suo motu cognizance of violence.

She said, "Human right violence is taking place all over the country. No one can stop the peaceful protest in this country. Hundreds of students injured, buses are burnt by the police and blame is being put on students."

On these contentions, the Chief Justice Bobde said the law and order situation should be handled by the police.

"Just because they happen to be students, it doesn't mean they can take law and order in their own hands. This has to be decided when things cool down. This is not the frame of mind when we can decide anything. We will take cognizance, but let this stop. We will see what we can do. First, we want to assure that there is peace," CJI Bobde said.

He, however, clarified that the court is "not against rights and peaceful demonstration" by the protesters.

Meanwhile, senior advocate Colin Gonsalves requested the top court to appoint a retired top court judge to inquire into the matter.

"Muslims are being kept away in the Citizenship (Amendment) Act. Afghstan is included but neighbours -- Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan are avoided. This cannot be accepted. It is against the Constitution to divide people on religious line. CAA is anti-democratic," he told the court.

The Act provides citizenship to Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian communities who faced religious persecution from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghstan and arrived in India before December 31, 2014.

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: Aligarh Muslim Universityindiabangladesh
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalBangladesh Bus Tragedy: 18 Bodies Recovered, Several Still Missing After Passenger Bus Plunges Into Padma River; Video Surfaces

InternationalIranian President Calls for Constructive Role of Brics to Halt West Asia Conflict During Talks With PM Modi

LifestyleEid 2026 Date: When Will Saudi Arabia, UAE and India Celebrate Eid-ul-Fitr?

MaharashtraMaharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis Unfurls 200-Foot National Flag at Nagpur’s Kasturchand Park

MumbaiMumbai Bomb Threat Emails Traced to Bangladesh IP; Sender Used VPN to Hide Location

National Realted Stories

NationalK'taka HC orders re-verification of postal ballots in Sringeri, stays order for two weeks

NationalGujarat CM, Dy CM press Kharge with questions after ‘illiterate’ remark, seek apology

National'Murderous Corruption': Rahul Gandhi hits out at AINRC-BJP govt over 'fake drugs' in Puducherry

NationalBadrinath Dham preparations reviewed ahead of April 23 opening; Temple Committee CEO sets April 20 deadline for works

NationalAkshaya Tritiya: MP govt steps up efforts to prevent child marriages