Reflections of a President of India on mercy petitions - Business Guardian
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Reflections of a President of India on mercy petitions

It is submitted that the President of India has no discretion in deciding the mercy petitions and such pleas are decided by the Home Minister of the Central Government in actual constitutional practice. It is the Union’s Home Minister who sends his inputs/advice to the President of India to complete the constitutional formalities as per Article 72 of the Constitution.

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The President of India is the constitutional head of the Union Government who exercises his constitutional powers and functions on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers headed by the Prime Minister as per the mandate of Article 74 of the Constitution. The Constitution also empowers him to grant pardon to convicted persons under Article 72. Under this provision, the President can grant pardon, reprieve, respite or remission of punishment, or to suspend, remit or commute the sentence of any person convicted of any offence in all cases-(a) where the punishment or sentence is by a court martial; (b) where the punishment or sentence is for an offence against a law relating to a matter to which the Union’s executive power extends; and (c) of a death sentence. This, however, does not affect the power conferred by law on any officer of the Union armed forces to suspend, remit or commute a sentence passed by a court martial, as well as the power exercisable by the State Executive to suspend, remit or commute a death sentence. Generally, the common people have an impression that the President exercises this power personally and he can grant pardon to any convict at his own discretion. But this is not true. In actual constitutional scheme and practice, the President acts on the advice of the Home Minister of the Union Government and he has no personal say in these kinds of cases. The Supreme Court has also settled this jurisprudence in several cases including the Kehar Singh case. However, the President can ask the Home Minister to reconsider the matter but if the Home Minister reiterates his recommendation, the President is bound to act according to his advice.

Admittedly, no time limit is mentioned in the Constitution to decide the mercy petitions by the President of India or the Governors of States. But the Supreme Court has suggested the government to decide the mercy pleas expeditiously. Also, in several cases, the Supreme Court has held that inordinate delay in deciding a mercy plea could be a ground for commuting a death sentence into life. Any person, including a foreign national, can send a mercy petition to the President or the Governor who sends the same to the Ministry of Home Affairs for taking the necessary input. The convict can file the mercy plea from the jail either through the prison officers or through his/her lawyer. These mercy petitions can also be sent via email. This piece focuses on how the President of India decides on the mercy petitions.

In his memoirs titled “My Presidential Years”, former President of India Mr. Pranab Mukherjee has narrated the story of the disposal of mercy petitions. Mr. Mukherjee states that the disposal of mercy petitions is a very sensitive matter which needs careful reading and application of mind. This is what Mr. Mukherjee said about this issue: “The President is not the punishing authority; the punishment has already been given by the court. The President is the last resort. Thus, a humane aspect arises by the time the President comes into the picture. I was constantly aware while handling such cases that I was the last hope for the convict and that his life was in my hands. It was not an ordinary, routine government file that I was dealing with. I used to take more than a week to read the case history and the court judgments. But I took no more than three weeks in all to dispose off a file”.

Notably, during his presidential tenure (2012-17), President Pranab Mukherjee rejected 30 mercy petitions involving nearly 40 convicts as some of his predecessors had left many petitions undecided. On this issue, Mr. Mukherjee states in his memoirs: “My distinguished predecessors, A. P. J. Abdul Kalam and Pratibha Patil, had left a large number of cases pending. In fact, Kalam hardly disposed off any mercy pleas while Patil had decided on a few of them. The latter had granted clemency to 34 convicts and rejected just three petitions for mercy. Different Presidents have different approaches”. Further, Mr. Mukherjee states: “I saw no point in keeping such files pending. The once I dealt with dated as far back as the years 2000, 2004, 2005, and 2007. Either way, they had to be decided and I took it upon myself to discharge the responsibility. The law of the land had to be upheld. While I deliberated long and hard over the files of mercy pleas, once I had taken a decision-I let the issue rest. I may have had sleepless nights while considering my decision, but after the decision was made, the matter was closed as far as I was concerned. I did not follow the developments thereafter in detail, though I did keep in touch with the issue in the general sense. It is a futile exercise for a President to closely follow the trajectory after he has done his job. I cannot say for certain if my successors will follow my example of disposing of mercy petitions quickly; after all, I did not follow the examples of my predecessors”.

About the factors that played on his mind while deciding the several mercy petitions, this is what Mr. Mukherjee states in his memoirs: “Over the years, broad outlines for dealing with mercy petitions had evolved. However, three factors played on my mind. The first factor was that the case by nature must have involved ferocity and cruelty, and it must fall within the rarest of rare category. Two, the death sentence, given by the trial court, should have been upheld by the High Court and the Supreme Court without any dissenting voice-in other words, with unanimous verdicts. And three, the Government should have recommended the rejection of the petition. Once these conditions were met, the President ought to have no problems in setting aside the mercy petition. This is the position I took as President. Generally, once the President rejects a mercy plea, the matter does not return to the Supreme Court unless fresh issues of technicality or legality are introduced. In certain cases, appeals for mercy are made to the Governor. I do not recollect any instance where I granted mercy after the Governor had rejected the plea”.

It is noteworthy that President Pranab Mukherjee used to read the mercy pleas deeply along with the judgments of the courts that convicted the petitioners and other materials attached with the files. “I would carefully read through the details, and even the court proceedings and verdicts, if they were in English. If they were in Hindi or a local language, then I would seek to understand the gist of the issue. In most cases, the judgments were in English. I remember a case that I read in detail, where a daughter (in collaboration with her husband) had killed her father and younger brothers over a property issue. The Sessions Court’s ruling was in Hindi”.

On the issue of exercise of the President’s pardoning power, Mr. Mukherjee said that the President acts on the recommendation of the Home Minister of the Union Government and has no scope to use his discretion in such matters. “While I, as President, had applied my mind to all the cases of mercy pleas that were presented to me with recommendations of the government, the fact remains that the President normally goes by the recommendation of the Ministry of Home Affairs in such cases. If the government recommends the rejection of a mercy plea, then the President has to concur; if the government favours a mercy petition being accepted, the President does so. I believe that if the government of the day recommends that a mercy plea should be rejected, then I as President must not stand in the way”.

It is submitted that the President of India has no discretion in deciding the mercy petitions and such pleas are decided by the Home Minister of the Central Government in actual constitutional practice. It is the Union’s Home Minister who sends his inputs/advice to the President of India to complete the constitutional formalities as per Article 72 of the Constitution. However, the President can ask the Home Minister to reconsider the recommendation in the light of his comments/observations, etc. But thereafter the final power rests with the Home Minister and the President cannot impose his views on the government. The President and the government can also scrutinize the evidence on record of the criminal case and come to a different conclusion from that recorded by the court regarding the guilt of, and sentence imposed on the convict. Adjudication of a case is entirely different from the mercy petition’s disposal by the President or the Governor, as the case may be.

Time and again, the Supreme Court of India has observed in many cases that the President and the Central Government should not sit on the mercy petitions for a long time and should decide such pleas within a reasonable time. In some cases of inordinate delay in deciding the mercy petitions, the Supreme Court/High Courts have also commuted the death sentence to life imprisonment. But it all depends on the facts and circumstances of each case. In addition, if the President rejects the mercy petition of a convict, the aggrieved person can challenge the validity of the rejection of the mercy petition in the Apex Court on limited grounds. Also, until the disposal of the petition, the convict cannot be hanged by the prison officials. This is the jurisprudence relating to the disposal of mercy petitions in the country. Thus, the pardoning power belongs to the Central Government, not the President of India. Former President Pranab Mukherjee’s memoirs are very useful to learn about the actual disposal of mercy petitions. Let me conclude this piece with these insightful observations made by Justice Krishna Iyer made in the Maru Ram case: “It is not open either to the President or the Governor to take an independent decision or direct release or refuse release of any one of their own choice. It is fundamental to the Westminster system that the Cabinet rules and the Queen reigns….that the President and the Governor, be they ever so high in textual terminology, are but functional euphemisms promptly acting on and only on the advice of the Council of Ministers save in a narrow area of power…that in the matter of exercise of the powers under Articles 72 and 161, the two highest dignitaries in our constitutional scheme act and must act not on their own judgment but in accordance with the aid and advice of the ministers. Article 74, after the 42nd Amendment, silences speculation and obligates compliance”.

Time and again, the Supreme Court of India has observed in many cases that the President and the Central Government should not sit on the mercy petitions for a long time and should decide such pleas within a reasonable time. In some cases of inordinate delay in deciding the mercy petitions, the Supreme Court/High Courts have also commuted the death sentence to life imprisonment.

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Policy&Politics

Kejriwal unveils ‘Guarantee’ for LS Polls: AAP’s pledge for change

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On “Kejriwal ki Guarantee”, he said 24X7 power supply, good education and health facilities, and arranging two crore jobs for youths every year are part of it.

Delhi Chief Minister and AAP national convener Arvind Kejriwal declared “Kejriwal ki Guarantee” on Sunday, outlining 10 urgent initiatives to be pursued swiftly, including the liberation of Indian territory from Chinese control, should the INDIA bloc come to power at the Centre. This opposition alliance, comprising parties like AAP, Congress, Trinamool Congress, and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, was established to challenge the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance in the Lok Sabha elections.

A day after his release from jail on interim bail, Kejriwal on Saturday said the INDIA bloc will form the next government and his AAP will be part of it. Addressing a press conference on Sunday, the AAP leader said people will have to choose between “Modi ki Guarantee” and “Kejriwal ki guarantee”. The latter is a “brand”, Kejriwal said.

On the announcement of his guarantees, Kejriwal said, “I have not discussed with my INDIA bloc partners about this. I will press upon my INDIA bloc partners to fulfill these guarantees.”

Kejriwal said while the AAP has fulfilled its “guarantees” of free power, good schools, and Mohalla Clinics in Delhi, “(Prime Minister Narendra) Modi has not fulfilled his guarantees”.

On “Kejriwal ki Guarantee”, he said 24X7 power supply, good education and health facilities, and arranging two crore jobs for youths every year are part of it.

“We worked on management to ensure 24×7 power supply in Punjab and Delhi. We can do it in the entire country. The government schools in the country are in a bad shape. We will arrange good quality education across the country. We know how to do it,” he said.

Kejriwal also promised to end the Agniveer scheme and ensure that farmers get MSP for their crops as per the Swaminathan Commission’s report. “Rashtra Sarvopari is our guarantee. China has occupied our land and we will free it from their occupation,” he said. Kejriwal also promised to provide full statehood to Delhi.

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Macro & financial stability, boost to infra, extended PLI likely key areas in Modi 3.0

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If one were to go by the Central Government’s poll manifesto which has stayed aligned to the pre-poll interim Budget, a strong adherence to the path of macro and financial stability as priorities, marked by low inflation, strong external balances, high growth, and fiscal prudence, appears to be the likely scenario if it comes back to power. A DBS Group research by Radhika Rao, senior economist, DBS Group Research and Taimur Baig, MD and Chief Economist, DBS Group Research indicates that the government will continue with the infrastructure push, policies to expand the manufacturing sector, and establish the country’s position as a voice of the Global South.

On the first, the focus will be on improving physical and digital infrastructure, marked by new metro networks, new railway tracks, new-age trains, improved connectivity, new bullet trains, roads, and energy infrastructure. Concurrently, besides expanding the 5G network, improving rural broadband connectivity, exploring 6G technology and the digitization of land records, amongst others, were highlighted in the to-do lists, as per Rao and Baig.

Secondly, Make-in-India and PLI schemes are likely to be expanded, with an emphasis on employment creation, simplification of regulatory processes, appropriate infra for manufacturing hubs, and R&D. A mix of traditional and new-age sectors will likely be prioritized, including a globally competitive food-processing industry, and core sectors (steel, cement, metals, engineering etc), besides a push towards indigenous defense manufacturing, pharma, new age & chip manufacturing, auto and electric vehicles, amongst others.

Existing social welfare programs are likely to be enhanced with better outreach, including, a middle-class focus through the provision of high-value jobs, quality healthcare and infra to improve ease of living, amongst others. Also on the radar is affordable housing program expansion with a focus on slum redevelopment, sustainable cities, etc. The PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana is to be a priority, which will continue to provide free foodgrain ration to about 800 mn residents. On healthcare, Rao and Baig see continuity to provide quality free health treatment to up to 500,000 poor families under Ayushman Bharat.

The economists are also of the view that the PM Ujjwala Yojana, which has already benefited 100 mn with cooking gas connections, will be expanded. Subsidies for solar panels on roofs of 10 mn households up to 300 units/month under the PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana, unorganized workers, farmers and continuation of financial assistance to farmers under PM Kisan, farm self-sufficiency, etc.), start-ups and micro-credit enterprises, will be the other focus areas to boost the economy from a bottom-up approach.

Rao and Baig foresee limited fiscal implications from these announcements as part of these were included in the interim budget and the manifesto did not outline any new big-bang reforms or fresh social welfare spending programs. “We maintain our FY25 fiscal deficit assumption at -5.1% of GDP with the existing borrowing program,” says the economists.

A broad-based push towards more contentious structural reforms (land, labor, farming, etc.) did not receive a mention in the manifesto, which may still be prioritized if the party returns for a third term. In our view, the incoming government is neither limited by nor will be restricted by the poll promises. To that extent, the scope of reforms can be wider than what has been laid out in the respective manifestos.

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Policy&Politics

Govt extends date for submission of R&D proposals

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The Government has extended the deadline for submission of proposals related to R&D scheme under the National Green Hydrogen Mission. The R&D scheme seeks to make the production, storage, transportation and utilisation of green hydrogen more affordable. It also aims to improve the efficiency, safety and reliability of the relevant processes and technologies involved in the green hydrogen value chain. Subsequent to the issue of the guidelines, the Ministry of New & Renewable Energy issued a call for proposals on 16 March, 2024.

While the Call for Proposals is receiving encouraging response, some stakeholders have requested more time for submission of R&D proposals. In view of such requests and to allow sufficient time to the institutions for submitting good-quality proposals, the Ministry has extended the deadline for submission of proposals to 27th April, 2024.

The scheme also aims to foster partnerships among industry, academia and government in order to establish an innovation ecosystem for green hydrogen technologies. The scheme will also help the scaling up and commercialisation of green hydrogen technologies by providing the necessary policy and regulatory support.

The R&D scheme will be implemented with a total budgetary outlay of Rs 400 crore till the financial year 2025-26. The support under the R&D programme includes all components of the green hydrogen value chain, namely, production, storage, compression, transportation, and utilisation.

The R&D projects supported under the mission will be goal-oriented, time bound, and suitable to be scaled up. In addition to industrial and institutional research, innovative MSMEs and start-ups working on indigenous technology development will also be encouraged under the Scheme.

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Policy&Politics

India, Brazil, South Africa to press for labour & social issues, sustainability

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The Indian delegation also comprises Rupesh Kumar Thakur, Joint Secretary, and Rakesh Gaur, Deputy Director from the Ministry of Labour & Employment.

India, on Thursday, joined the G20’s two-day 2nd Employment Working Group (EWG) meeting under the Brazilian Presidency which is all set to address labour, employment and social issues for strong, sustainable, balanced and job-rich growth for all. India is co-chairing the 2nd EWG meeting, along with Brazil and South Africa, and is represented by Sumita Dawra, Secretary, Labour & Employment.

The Indian delegation also comprises Rupesh Kumar Thakur, Joint Secretary, and Rakesh Gaur, Deputy Director from the Ministry of Labour & Employment. India has pointed out that the priority areas of the 2nd EWG at Brasilia align with the priority areas and outcomes of previous G20 presidencies including Indian presidency, and commended the continuity in the multi-year agenda to create lasting positive change in the world of work. This not only sustains but also elevates the work initiated by the EWG during the Indian Presidency.

The focus areas for the 2nd EWG meeting are — creating quality employment and promoting decent labour, addressing a just transition amidst digital and energy transformations, leveraging technologies to enhance the quality of life for al and the emphasis on gender equity and promoting diversity in the world of employment for inclusivity, driving innovation and growth. On the first day of the meeting, deliberations were held on the over-arching theme of promotion of gender equality and promoting diversity in the workplace.

The Indian delegation emphasized the need for creating inclusive environments by ensuring equal representation and empowerment for all, irrespective of race, gender, ethnicity, or socio-economic background. To increase female labour force participation, India has enacted occupational safety health and working conditions code, 2020 which entitles women to be employed in all establishments for all types of work with their consent at night time. This provision has already been implemented in underground mines.

In 2017, the Government amended the Maternity Benefit Act of 1961, which increased the ‘maternity leave with pay protection’ from 12 weeks to 26 weeks for all women working in establishments employing 10 or more workers. This is expected to reduce the motherhood pay gap among the working mothers. To aid migrant workers, India’s innovative policy ‘One Nation, One Ration Card’ allows migrants to access their entitled food grains from anywhere in the Public Distribution System network in the country.

A landmark step in fostering inclusion in the workforce is the e-Shram portal, launched to create a national database of unorganized workers, especially migrant and construction workers. This initiative, providing the e-Shram card, enables access to benefits under various social security schemes.

The portal allows an unorganized worker to register himself or herself on the portal on self-declaration basis, under 400 occupations in 30 broad occupation sectors. More than 290 million unorganized workers have been registered on this portal so far.

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Policy&Politics

India to spend USD 3.7 billion to fence Myanmar border

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India plans to spend nearly $3.7 billion to fence its 1,610-km (1,000-mile) porous border with Myanmar within about a decade, said a source with direct knowledge of the matter, to prevent smuggling and other illegal activities. New Delhi said earlier this year it would fence the border and end a decades-old visa-free movement policy with coup-hit Myanmar for border citizens for reasons of national security and to maintain the demographic structure of its northeastern region.

A government committee earlier this month approved the cost for the fencing, which needs to be approved by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s cabinet, said the source who declined to be named as they were not authorised to talk to the media. The prime minister’s office and the ministries of home, finance, foreign affairs and information and broadcasting did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Myanmar has so far not commented on India’s fencing plans. Since a military coup in Myanmar in 2021, thousands of civilians and hundreds of troops have fled from there to Indian states where people on both sides share ethnic and familial ties. This has worried New Delhi because of risk of communal tensions spreading to India. Some members of the Indian government have also blamed the porous border for abetting the tense situation in the restive north-eastern Indian state of Manipur, abutting Myanmar.

For nearly a year, Manipur has been engulfed by a civil war-like situation between two ethnic groups, one of which shares lineage with Myanmar’s Chin tribe. The committee of senior Indian officials also agreed to build parallel roads along the fence and 1,700 km (1,050 miles) of feeder roads connecting military bases to the border, the source said.

The fence and the adjoining road will cost nearly 125 million rupees per km, more than double that of the 55 million per km cost for the border fence with Bangladesh built in 2020, the source said, because of the difficult hilly terrain and the use of technology to prevent intrusion and corrosion.

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Policy&Politics

ONLY 2-3% RECOVERED FROM $2-3 TN ANNUAL ILLEGAL TRADE THROUGH BANKING: INTERPOL

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However, Stock highlighted the enormity of the challenge, noting that between 40% and 70% of criminal profits are reinvested, perpetuating the cycle of illicit financial activity.

In a press briefing held on Wednesday, Interpol Secretary General Jurgen Stock unveiled alarming statistics regarding the extent of undetected money laundering and illegal trade transactions plaguing the global banking network. Stock revealed that over 96% of the money transacted through this network remains undetected, with only 2-3% of the estimated USD 2-3 trillion from illegal trade being tracked and returned to victims.

Interpol, working in conjunction with law enforcement agencies and private financial sectors across its 196 member countries, is committed to combating the rising tide of fraud perpetrated by illicit traders. These criminal activities encompass a wide spectrum, including drug trafficking, human trafficking, arms dealing, and the illicit movement of financial assets.

Stock emphasized the urgent need to establish mechanisms for monitoring transactions within the global banking network. Currently, efforts are underway to engage banking associations worldwide in setting up such a framework. However, Stock highlighted the enormity of the challenge, noting that between 40% and 70% of criminal profits are reinvested, perpetuating the cycle of illicit financial activity. The lack of real-time information sharing poses a significant obstacle to law enforcement agencies in their efforts to combat money laundering and illegal trade.

Stock underscored the role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in exacerbating this problem, citing its use in voice cloning and other fraudulent activities. Criminal organizations are leveraging AI technologies to expand their operations and evade detection on a global scale. Stock emphasized the importance of enhanced cooperation between law enforcement agencies and private sector banking groups. Realtime information sharing is crucial in the fight against illegal wealth accumulation.

Drawing inspiration from initiatives such as the “Singapore Anti-Scam Centre,” Stock called for the adoption of similar models in other countries to strengthen the collective response to financial crimes. In conclusion, Stock’s revelations underscore the pressing need for concerted action to combat global financial crimes. Enhanced cooperation between public and private sectors, coupled with innovative strategies for monitoring and combating illicit transactions, is essential to safeguarding the integrity of the global financial system.

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