Justice Pardiwala Terms Section 6A Constitutionally Invalid
NEW DELHI: Supreme Court’s Justice J.B. Pardiwala dissenting from the majority judgment on Thursday held that Section 6A of the Citizenship Act of 1955 was arbitrary and constitutionally invalid.
In a dissenting opinion, Justice Pardiwala said the open-ended nature of Section 6A had become more prone to abuse due to the advent of forged documents.
“The open-ended nature of Section 6A has, with the passage time, become more prone to abuse due to the advent of forged documents to establish, inter-alia (among other things), wrong date of entry into Assam, inaccurate lineage, falsified government records created by corrupt officials, dishonest corroboration of the date of entry by other relatives so as to aid illegal immigrants who are otherwise not eligible under Section 6A by virtue of having entered into Assam after March 24,1971,” he noted in a separate 127-page dissenting judgment.
Justice Pardiwala said Section 6A promotes further immigration into Assam without any end date of application and immigrants come hoping with forged documents to set up the defence of belonging to pre-1966 or the 1966-71 stream upon identification as a foreigner and reference to the tribunal.
The judge said while the object that was sought to be achieved with the enactment of Section 6A of the Citizenship Act remained a distant dream, its misuse had only continued to increase with the passage of time.
“I say so because with the passage of time, the government records would get damaged and perish, making it increasingly difficult to cross-check the false claims that may be made by the immigrants of the post-1971 stream trying to misuse the benefits conferred exclusively to the immigrants of the pre1971 stream,” observed Justice Pardiwala.
He further said that Section 6A, in the absence of any temporal limit to its application was being counter-productive to the object of enactment. “Neither Section 6A nor the rules made there under prescribe any outer time-limit for the completion of detection of all such persons who belong to the 1966-71 stream and are eligible to avail the benefits of Section 6A(3). The clock only starts to tick once the detection is made by the foreigners’ tribunal and there is no prescription as to the period of time within which the exercise of detection is to be completed from the commencement of Section 6A,” he underlined.
“Secondly, it incentivises the immigrants belonging to the 1966-71 stream to continue to remain on the electoral rolls for an indefinite period and only get themselves registered under Section 6A once detected by a competent tribunal. Hence, the manner in which the provision is worded, counter-serves the very purpose of its enactment,” the judge said.
“I have reached the conclusion that Section 6A of the Citizenship Act deserves to be declared invalid with prospective effect,” he added.