No coercive action against those challenging Roshni Act judgment: SC told

The Roshni Act was enacted in 2001 with the twin objective of generating resources for financing power projects and conferment of proprietary rights to the occupants of State land.

January 25, 2021 05:43 pm | Updated 06:00 pm IST - New Delhi

Supreme Court of India in New Delhi.

Supreme Court of India in New Delhi.

The Jammu and Kashmir administration told the Supreme Court on January 25 that no coercive action would be taken against those persons who have approached the top court against the High Court verdict of scrapping the Roshni Act of 2001.

A Bench of Justices N.V. Ramana, Surya Kant and Aniruddha Bose was informed by Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Jammu and Kashmir administration, that the review petition against the High Court’s October 9 verdict is pending there and would be taken up on Thursday.

The Bench noted the submission that the pending review petition was yet to come up before the High Court and granted liberty to petitioners to mention the matter thereafter.

One of the lawyers appearing for the petitioners said that no coercive action should be taken against them as per the statement made by Mr. Mehta during the last hearing.

On December 10, Mr. Mehta had said that no coercive action would be taken against those petitioners who had approached the top court in the matter as they were not “land grabbers or unauthorised people”.

The Roshni Act was enacted in 2001 with the twin objective of generating resources for financing power projects and conferment of proprietary rights to the occupants of State land.

The Jammu and Kashmir High Court had, on October 9, declared the Act “illegal, unconstitutional and unsustainable”, and ordered a CBI probe into the allotment of land under this law.

As many as six pleas were listed for hearing in the top court on January 25 and as per Mr. Mehta’s oral submission, the protection would cover Broadway Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., Nisar Hussain, Danish Aman, Hakim Suhail, Muhammed Muzaffar Shawl, Tejinder Singh Sethi, along with some other co-petitioners.

The top court had said in its December 10 order that it had come to know that review petitions had been filed by Jammu and Kashmir as well as by some private individuals before the High Court and that the hearing was due in the last week of December. Thereafter, it had adjourned the matter for further hearing to the last week of January 2021.

Mr. Mehta, while apprising the top court that Jammu and Kashmir had already filed a review petition in the High Court, had said the authority was “not against bonafide and common people who are not land grabbers”.

The top court had also clarified that the pendency of these special leave petitions before it would not come in the way of review petitions hearings by the High Court. It had granted liberty to the petitioners before the top court to also file review petition(s), if any, before the High Court.

On December 7, the High Court had adjourned the hearing on a petition filed by the administration seeking a review of its earlier order scrapping the Roshni Act in totality.

The petition, filed by Revenue Department Special Secretary Nazir Ahmad Thakur on December 4 for modification of the judgment, had pleaded that a large number of common people, including landless cultivators, would suffer.

The Roshni Act initially envisaged conferment of proprietary rights of around 20.55 lakh kanals (102,750 hectares) to the occupants, out of which only 15.85% land was approved for vesting of ownership rights.

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