Kiren Rijiju’s new letter on Collegium system draws Opposition flak  

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New Delhi: Law Minister Kiren Rijiju has written to the Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud for the inclusion of government nominees in the Supreme Court Collegium system on appointments to the higher judiciary and defended it as a ‘precise follow-up action’ suggested by the apex court while striking down the NJAC Act.

Rijiju’s early January letter to the CJI and the remarks Monday come amid a tug-of-war between the government and the judiciary over the process of appointments of judges to the Supreme Court and high courts.

Besides several Union ministers, Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar has slammed the 2015 scrapping of the National Judicial Appointment Commission (NJAC) by the Supreme Court. He had claimed that the judiciary was encroaching on the domain of the legislature.

The Opposition, however, hit out at the move, with Congress leader Jairam Ramesh saying that while reforms were needed, the government’s remedy was a ‘poison pill’ for the independent judiciary. The Opposition also alleged that it was an ‘orchestrated confrontation’ by the government to ‘capture’ the judiciary.

Officials said the Law Minister has sought the setting up of a ‘search and evaluation committee’ with representation from the central and the state governments in the selection of judges for the Supreme Court and the high courts, respectively.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal dubbed the government’s move as ‘extremely dangerous’. “There should be absolutely no government interference in judicial appointments,” Kejriwal said on Twitter.

Reacting to Delhi Chief Minister’s remarks, Rijiju said the move is in line with the direction of the Constitution Bench to restructure the MoP (Memorandum of Procedure) of the Collegium system.

“I hope you honour Court’s direction! This is precise follow-up action of the direction of the Supreme Court Constitution Bench while striking down the National Judicial Appointment Commission Act. The SC Constitution Bench had directed to restructure the MoP (Memorandum of Procedure) of the Collegium system,” Rijiju said on Twitter.

“The contents in the letter to hon’ble CJI are exactly in conformity with the observations and directions of the Supreme Court Constitution Bench. Convenient politics is not advisable, especially in the name of Judiciary. Constitution of India is supreme and nobody is above it,” Rijiju pointed out.

Ramesh alleged that the government was seeking ‘complete subservience’. “The VP’s assaults. The Law Minister’s attacks. All this is orchestrated confrontation with the judiciary to intimidate and thereafter capture it totally. The Collegium needs reform. But what this Govt wants is complete subservience – it’s remedy is a poison pill for the judiciary,” Ramesh said on Twitter.

In November, Rijiju had said that the collegium system of making judicial appointments was ‘alien’ to the Constitution.

A parliamentary panel too had expressed surprise that the government and the Supreme Court Collegium have failed to arrive at a consensus on the MoP, guiding the appointment, elevation and transfer of apex court and high court judges, even after almost seven years.

In October 2015, a five-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court declared the NJAC Act, passed unanimously by Parliament, for appointing judges as unconstitutional on several counts.

 

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