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बेबाक · Editorial

ನ್ಯಾಯಾಲಯವು ನಾಗರಿಕರ ಮೊದಲ ಆಶ್ರಯವಾದಾಗ, ಕಾರ್ಯಾಂಗವು ಎರಡು ಬಾರಿ ವಿಫಲವಾಗಿದೆ.

ಸರ್ವೋಚ್ಚ ನ್ಯಾಯಾಲಯದಿಂದ ಹಿಡಿದು ಮೂರು ಉಚ್ಚ ನ್ಯಾಯಾಲಯಗಳವರೆಗೆ, ನಾಗರಿಕರು ಹೊಣೆಗಾರಿಕೆ ಮತ್ತು ಸುರಕ್ಷತೆಯ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ಮೊಕದ್ದಮೆ ಹೂಡುತ್ತಿದ್ದಾರೆ, ಅವರ ಆಡಳಿತವು ಅದನ್ನು ಪೂರೈಸುವಲ್ಲಿ ವಿಫಲವಾಗಿದೆ-ಮತ್ತು ನ್ಯಾಯಪೀಠವನ್ನು ಹೆಚ್ಚಿನದನ್ನು ಹೊತ್ತುಕೊಳ್ಳಲು ಕೇಳಲಾಗುತ್ತಿದೆ.

बेबाक — The Mudda Editorial Desk · ⚠️ Concern

ದೋಣಿಯಲ್ಲಿ ಒಂದು ವಾರ

ಈ ವಾರ, ರಾಜ್ಯಗಳಿಂದ ಕಳುಹಿಸಲಾದ ವರದಿಗಳು ನ್ಯಾಯಾಲಯದ ಕಾರಣಗಳ ಪಟ್ಟಿಯಂತೆ ಓದಲ್ಪಟ್ಟವು.

Last resort, first stop

There is a difference between a judiciary that is the last resort and one that has become the first stop. The Constitution built courts to correct error, not to run the State. Yet when RTI activists are before the Supreme Court in a case arising from alleged obstruction of road work, when a litigant before the Madras High Court insists on a CBI probe into the circumstances that led four legislators to resign, and when a contempt plea becomes the lever to make a senior bureaucrat answer in the cashew case, the signal is unmistakable. The ordinary machinery — the engineer, the election authority, the vigilance wing, the secretary — has either failed to act or failed to inspire confidence that it will. The bench then inherits work never meant for it, and the citizen learns that nothing moves until a judge is petitioned.

Both sides, honestly

Steel-man the bench first. Courts are right to be wary of litigation as leverage; the Supreme Court's unease that some activism can shade into obstruction of public works is not illegitimate, and public work cannot be held hostage by every private grievance. Now steel-man the citizen. The Right to Information regime exists precisely because officials can conceal what the public is owed, and a transparency law is weakened if its users face criminal process for conduct that may also be presented as scrutiny. Both truths hold at once. The honest reading is neither that activists are a 'new business' nor that the State is always venal, but that India lacks a credible forum, short of a judge, where an honest grievance is heard quickly and an obstructive one is filtered out early.

What the record shows

Consider the delays the record itself discloses. Before the Madras High Court, Justice G.K. Ilanthiraiyan deferred orders on a plea to condone a delay of 839 days in filing a third-party revision against the 2022 acquittal of former Minister Geetha Jeevan in a disproportionate-assets case dating to 2002. Two decades on, a simple question of clean hands remains unresolved. In Kerala, A.P.M. Mohammad Hanish must appear in person on June 19 after the Kerala High Court found no reason to interfere in the contempt plea before the Single Bench. Meanwhile, routine governance fails elsewhere: in Odisha, experts warn that snakebite deaths rise when treatment slips past the 'golden hour' during the monsoon season, and in Telangana the Chief Minister says the Centre has reneged on its Hyderabad Metro phase-2 commitment while seeking a no-objection certificate for State-led funding. The courts are busiest precisely where the State is slowest.

The considered verdict

The verdict is not triumph for the judiciary but disquiet for the republic. A court system asked to protect a former judge and his family, examine the consequences of legislators' resignations, pursue a secretary through contempt, and adjudicate a quarrel arising from road work is being made to substitute for policing, administration and politics at once. That is unsustainable, and corrosive: when the bench is the only institution seen to function, every loss there is cast as persecution and every win as vindication, and judicial authority is quietly spent. Loading the courts with the failures of every other arm of the State does not deepen the rule of law. It thins it — case by case, adjournment by adjournment — until the one door still believed to work is itself overwhelmed.

The way forward

Repair lies not in more sermons about pendency but in fewer reasons to litigate. Three steps are feasible now. First, give the Right to Information regime real teeth — ensure timely disclosure and penalise wilful denial — so that scrutiny does not end in pre-arrest bail proceedings. Second, build independent, time-bound grievance and vigilance forums within each State, with functional and financial autonomy, so a citizen need not climb to a High Court to make an official answer. Third, fix delivery at the front line: stock anti-venom and train staff for the snakebite 'golden hour' across Odisha's districts during the monsoon, and resolve inter-governmental commitments such as Hyderabad Metro phase-2 rather than litigate or posture around them. Let the courts judge. Let the State, at last, govern.

ಪ್ರತಿಯೊಂದು ಕುಂದುಕೊರತೆಗಳನ್ನು ನ್ಯಾಯಾಧೀಶರ ಬಳಿಗೆ ಕೊಂಡೊಯ್ಯುವ ಗಣರಾಜ್ಯವು ತನ್ನ ನ್ಯಾಯಾಲಯಗಳನ್ನು ಬಲಪಡಿಸಿಲ್ಲ; ಉಳಿದ ಎಲ್ಲವೂ ಕೆಲಸ ಮಾಡುವುದನ್ನು ನಿಲ್ಲಿಸಿದೆ ಎಂದು ಒಪ್ಪಿಕೊಂಡಿದೆ.
ಏನು ಅಪಾಯದಲ್ಲಿದೆ

At stake is whether Article 21 safety and liberty, Article 41 public assistance, Article 47 public welfare duties and Article 50’s separation of powers can function without courts becoming the executive’s complaint desk.

मुद्दाಕೇಳಿದ ಪ್ರಶ್ನೆ.ಸಾಂವಿಧಾನಿಕ ಪ್ರಸ್ತಾಪ

State Accountability Triage Law

Parliament should frame a Model State Accountability Triage Bill for States to adopt, creating an independent district-level grievance authority for RTI-linked public work disputes, protection requests, vigilance delays and official non-compliance before matters reach court. The authority should issue reasoned orders within fixed statutory deadlines, publish RTI-disclosable status reports, protect bona fide complainants from retaliatory process, and swiftly reject obstructive or bad-faith grievances so courts remain the last resort, not the first stop.

ನೆಲಸಮವಾಗಿದೆArticle 21Article 47Article 41Article 50

ನಿಮ್ಮ ಸಾಂವಿಧಾನಿಕ ಹಕ್ಕುಗಳು

ಈ ಕಥೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ಸಂವಿಧಾನವು ಏನು ಭರವಸೆ ನೀಡುತ್ತದೆ?
Article 21
Right to life & personal liberty

No person shall be deprived of life or personal liberty except by a fair, just and reasonable procedure established by law — read by the courts to include dignity, privacy, health, a clean environment and livelihood.

Fundamental Right
Article 47
Public health duty

The State shall regard raising the level of nutrition and public health as among its primary duties.

Directive Principle
Article 41
Right to work & public assistance

The State shall, within its capacity, secure the right to work, education and public assistance in cases of unemployment, old age, sickness and disablement.

Directive Principle
Article 50
Separation of judiciary & executive

The State shall take steps to separate the judiciary from the executive in the public services.

Directive Principle

What this editorial rests on

Drawn from our live multi-newsroom feed — read the reporting at source.

Telangana ready to fund metro phase-2 without Centre: CM Reddy
Hindustan Times · 1 newsroom · Telangana
RTI activism is ‘new business’: SC denies pre-arrest bail
Hindustan Times · 1 newsroom · Punjab

ಚಳವಳಿಯಲ್ಲಿ ಪಾಲ್ಗೊಳ್ಳಿ.

ಒಂದು ಸಮಯದಲ್ಲಿ ಒಂದು ನಿರ್ಭೀತರ ಸಂಪಾದಕೀಯ-ನಿಮ್ಮ ಭಾಷೆಯಲ್ಲಿ. ಜೊತೆಗೆ ಅನುಸರಿಸಬೇಕಾದ ಸಾಂವಿಧಾನಿಕ ಕೋರಿಕೆ.

judiciaryaccountabilitygovernancerule-of-lawpublic-health

An editorial is the considered opinion of The Mudda desk, argued from the sourced reporting above and written under our published persona, बेबाक. We name institutions and actors; we do not endorse or attack any political party. "The Mudda's Ask" is a citizen's good-faith policy proposal, grounded in the Constitution — not the platform of any party. Translations are faithful — no fact is added in any language. If we are wrong, we will say so. How we work →

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