Srinagar: The High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh on Tuesday dismissed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) filed by PDP President and former Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti seeking transfer of undertrials from jails outside the union Territory back to J&K.
A Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Arun Palli and Justice Rajnesh Oswal held that the petition was vague, unsubstantiated and politically driven, and failed to meet the legal standards required for entertaining a PIL.
Mehbooba had sought directions for the immediate transfer of all undertrials belonging to J&K who are lodged in prisons outside the UT, unless authorities could demonstrate “unavoidable and compelling necessity” for such detention.
She had also sought weekly family meetings, unrestricted lawyer-client interviews, constitution of oversight committees, monitoring by Legal Services Authorities, and travel reimbursement for families of prisoners.
The High Court observed that the petitioner failed to provide specifics of affected families or prisoners, the nature of cases, or any transfer orders.
“..Detention of the undertrials in the prisons outside the home union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir is not a universal practice but is based on individual orders issued by the competent authority in the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case, which are individual specific.
“Lacking material documents and grounded in ambiguity, the petition seeks to invoke the writ jurisdiction on the basis of incomplete and unsubstantiated facts, clearly unveiling its political undercurrents. We cannot lose sight of the fact that the petitioner is the President of the Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party, a prominent political party in the union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir but in opposition at present,” the Court observed.
The Court further observed that it appears that the instant petition has been initiated by the petitioner for the “explicit purpose of garnering political advantage and positioning herself as a crusader of justice for a particular demographic.”
The High Court further underscored that Jammu and Kashmir’s violent past, shaped by forces hostile to the nation’s unity and integrity, noting that even the petitioner acknowledged the region’s special circumstances.
The court said the petitioner failed to detail what constituted “exceptional cases” warranting detention of undertrials outside the UT, while warning that Public Interest Litigation cannot be misused to advance partisan agendas, gain political leverage, or convert courts into platforms for “achieving electoral advantage.”
The High Court held that undertrial prisoners already have effective judicial remedies to challenge any grievance related to their detention, noting that none of the alleged aggrieved undertrials had approached the court, even through the established legal aid mechanism under the Legal Services Authorities Act.
The court said this omission indicated a lack of genuine grievance, and ruled that since an institutional framework exists to safeguard prisoners’ rights, the petitioner lacks the standing to espouse their cause.
“….Given that the affected undertrials have raised no grievance regarding their transfer to prisons outside U.T of Jammu and Kashmir, the petitioner stands as a third-party stranger to the cause and has no locus standi to invoke the Court’s jurisdiction,” the Court observed.
“A PIL is maintainable only upon a prima facie showing of public interest. Where such interest is in doubt or compromised by extraneous considerations, the Court must decline to interfere, as preventing the abuse of legal process is, in itself, a matter of significant public interest. In light of what has been said and discussed above, the present petition is found to be misconceived and is, accordingly, dismissed,” the Bench said.
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