Official did not quit over Yakub: SC

August 03, 2015 02:27 am | Updated November 16, 2021 05:21 pm IST - NEW DELHI:

The Supreme Court Registry on Sunday took serious objection to the news item in the electronic and the print media that Deputy Registrar (Research) Dr. Anup Surendranath quit in protest over the 1993 Mumbai blasts case death row convict Yakub Memon and the court’s order against stay of his execution.

A press note on the court’s official website said the news item was “distorted,” “incorrect” and “highly misleading.”

The note signed by the Secretary General of Supreme Court, V.S.R. Avadhani, has attached Mr. Surendranath’s resignation letter dated July 31 with it. It said the correct facts have to be published in order to “dispel any misgivings due to the distorted news item.”

It said Mr. Surendranath, “a faculty working on a short-term assignment on deputation in Supreme Court as Deputy Registrar (Research), has been repatriated to his parent institution w.e.f. 31.7.2015 on his own request as he wanted to pursue his interests in research projects he is involved in.”

News items published in the media quoted the Facebook posts of Mr. Surendranath about the circumstances of his resignation.

In his FB post on August 1, Mr. Surendranath said: “I have been contemplating this for a while now for a variety of reasons, but what was played out this week at the Supreme Court was the proverbial final nail...”

His July 30 FB post said: “It would be silly and naive to see the events of the last 24 hours at the Supreme Court as some triumph of the rule of law — the two orders at 4 p.m. on 29th July and 5 a.m. on 30th July [and the reasoning adopted therein] are instances of judicial abdication that must count amongst the darkest hours for the Supreme Court of India.”

Mr. Surendranath is the Director of the Death Penalty Litigation Clinic run by the National Law University. The Clinic was represented by senior advocate T.R. Andhyarujina in the Supreme Court in the Memon case. It had argued for stay of execution on July 30.

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