The bill to control public interest litigation would have had serious repercussions for medical activists, writes
The government seems to have given up its efforts to introduce in Parliament the Public Interest Litigation (PIL) Bill, 1997, to rein in the judiciary in the garb of stopping the so-called flood of frivolous public interest litigations.
A draft of the proposed bill, then pending before the Cabinet for approval,suggested a mandatory interest- free deposit of Rs one lakh for every PIL in the Supreme Court and Rs 50,000 in the High Court. The deposit would have been refunded, at the discretion of the court, if the petitioner won the case. However, if the court found a petition frivolous, the petitioner would have not only forfeited the deposit, he would also have attracted a punitive fine. The draft proposal sought to cover not only. prospective PILs but existing cases as well.
The note to the Cabinet stated, “The judiciary has digressed from its traditional duties and functions as an interpreter of the Constitution and the laws and entered into a field in which it has no competence or safe standards for judicial action. (It) has failed to recognise that it cannot be a substitute for the failure or irresponsibility of other branches of the government and start delivering increasingly legislative or administrative judgements.” The law ministry said it contemplated this legislation ‘to regulate’ PIL, the profligacy of which has been thought to be ‘choking’ the judicial system. Expressing concern over the huge backlog of cases, the minister of state for law, Mr Ramakant D Khalap, said, “PIL was being resorted by some people in an indiscriminate manner.”
The minister’s concern for the well being of the judiciary was commendable. However, the judiciary has ably demonstrated that it is more than capable of looking after itself. The apex court itself has curbed the misuse of PIL, imposing exemplary costs and in some cases making the so called public petitioner pay a fine for abusing the sacred process of law.
Chief Justice Ahmadi criticised the move saying that PIL was an important lever available to citizens, and access to justice must not be denied by imposing an economic constraint. Chief Justice designate Jagdish Sharan Verma made it known that the apex court was under a constitutional obligation to intervene whenever a citizen invoked Article 32 to have his grievances against the state’s inaction or excesses redressed.
PIL became an imperative primarily because of executive inaction and legislative apathy towards people’s suffering.Since the apex court treated a postcard as a writ petition in the public interest (regarding the police blinding of suspected thieves in Bhagalpur), PIL has become a wonder drug for the aggrieved common man, however unpalatable it may be for the establishment.
In medical activism, PIL has covered poor water supply and sanitation, ill-maintained blood banks, apathy towards road accident victims, and so on.
It was PIL filed by Dr Vincent Panikulangara in the Supreme Court in 1983 which got high-dose oestrogen-progesterone(EP) drugs banned in India. In 1993 a number of voluntary health organisations jointly filed PIL in the Supreme Court to screen and weed out irrational and hazardous drugs in our country.
In 1990-91, PIL forced the state governments to set up consumer courts in their states; another forced the government to revive those shut down through government indifference.
PIL can be used for medical activism in areas like checking human rights violations on AIDS patients. It is known that patients admitted in private hospitals are discharged without treatment if found to be HIV- positive. In Manipur, HIV- positive people have been chained and kept in isolated camps. At least two instances are on record where medical personnel at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences refused to treat HIV- positive patients. Mr Dominic D’souza was asked to leave his job at the World Wildlife Fund because he was found to be HIV- positive. These are. just some examples where PIL could help.
The intended AIDS Prevention Bill clearly violated Article 21 and would have been subject to PIL.
PIL can be used to ensure that the illiterate and ignorant are not denied the fruits of medical advancement. In government hospitals, actions such as limiting costly investigations to the powerful, rationing essential drugs and doing unethical research — can be fought by medical activists through the courts.
Activism may not be the ideal solution to our problems, but is nevertheless needed to highlight the state of affairs in the affairs of the state. The bill’s precondition of a hefty deposit would certainly prevent social organisations and activists from seeking justice.
Seeking justice cannot be the monopoly of the rich and affluent. On the contrary it is the poor, the weak and unorganised who need justice most. Instead of such repressive bills, the government should address the problem that generates activism: a severe lack of transparency. So long as the executive and bureaucracy rarely take the people into confidence in decision making, their decisions will remain suspect, and activism will remain the citizen’s best option to be heard.