Shaheen Bagh Anti-CAA Protests: Your Right to Protest Shouldn't Encroach on Others' Rights, Supreme Court Mediator Tells Protesters
The Supreme Court had on Monday appointed senior lawyers Sanjay Hegde and Sadhana Ramachandran besides former Chief Information Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah to go and talk to protesters at Shaheen Bagh area to convince them to hold the agitation at an alternative site.The apex court has fixed the matter for further hearing on February 24.
New Delhi, February 19: Supreme Court-appointed mediator Sadhana Ramachandran on Wednesday interacted with the anti-CAA protestors at Shaheen Bagh and said that their right to protest should not affect the right of others to use public road and services.
"The Supreme Court has said that you have the right to protest. The law (CAA) has been challenged in the Supreme Court. But like us, others too have their rights, like the right to use roads, open their shops, students reaching their schools. Your right to protest should not affect the right of others to use these services," Ramachandran said at Shaheen Bagh. Supreme Court-Appointed Mediators Sanjay Hegde and Sadhana Ramachandran Meet Shaheen Bagh Protesters, Say ‘Hoping to Resolve Issue With Everyone’s Cooperation’.
Talking to the protestors, she said that she will hear them out and together they will find a solution that will set an example for not only the country but for the world. "It will tell the world that we think about everyone and not only ourselves," she told the demonstrators protesting against the recently implemented Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).
Senior advocate Sanjay Hegde also read the Supreme Court order to the protestors."We have come here according to the order of the Supreme Court. We hope to speak to everyone. We hope to resolve the matter with everybody's co-operation," Hegde told reporters ahead of the interaction.
The Supreme Court had on Monday appointed senior lawyers Sanjay Hegde and Sadhana Ramachandran besides former Chief Information Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah to go and talk to protesters at Shaheen Bagh area to convince them to hold the agitation at an alternative site.The apex court has fixed the matter for further hearing on February 24.
Thousands of people, including a large number of Muslim women, have been staging a sit-in protest at Delhi's Shaheen Bagh area since mid-December last year against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and the proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC).The PIL, filed by Nand Kishore Garg and Amit Sahni through their lawyer Shashank Deo Sudhi last week, sought appropriate directions to the Centre and others concerned for removal of protestors from Shaheen Bagh near Kalindi Kunj. Shaheen Bagh Anti-CAA Protests: People Have Right to Protest but There Must Be Balancing Factor, Says Supreme Court.
The petition seeks appropriate direction to the respondents, including the Union of India, for laying down "detailed, comprehensive and exhaustive guidelines relating to outright restrictions for holding protest/agitation" leading to obstruction of the public space.