@reddy2002_varun@teaandbusquetss One individual is a convicted rapist, the other has been incarcerated for more than five years without trial, a duration after which he should have automatically been released on bail.
@iabhi0717 Yogi has two types of supporters mainly. One are caste and community based, other ones don't live in UP and thinks that he has pulled some Somalia to Singapore like transformation in state.
While these points may sound cool and appealing to the masses, but legally, point 2, 4 and 5 are manifestly arbitrary and could not be sustained. Hence they only have two valid points which can be fulfilled.
Most of the HC and SC Judges come from elite class and so do most of the 'Big' academics, hence they have very limited experience of trial court, which is why their critique and their guidelines, do not translate into reality.
The normalisation of police torture is an affront to the rule of law. Whatever the crime, the cops do not have the right to torture anyone. The climate of violence this fosters in the police force is a danger to every single person - accused or not!
If we don't educate children in history, culture, languages, religion, traditions, ethics and critical thinking preferring instead to limit them to STEM subjects, then we are raising a generation of easy to manipulate morons. This is becoming ever more obvious today.
Prof. M. P. Singh, one of India’s most respected scholars of constitutional and administrative law, has passed away today.
For generations of law students, his name was inseparable from V.N. Shukla’s Constitution of India, a text that shaped how countless young lawyers first understood the Constitution.
As Professor and Dean at the Faculty of Law, University of Delhi, and later as Vice-Chancellor of NUJS Kolkata, Prof. Singh played a pivotal role in shaping legal education in India. His classrooms were known for rigorous discussions on constitutional values, comparative law, and human rights.
Beyond administration and teaching, his scholarship influenced debates on constitutional interpretation, governance, and social justice for decades.
With his passing, Indian legal academia has lost one of its most thoughtful voices. His writings, his students, and the institutions he helped build will continue to carry his legacy forward.
Om shanti and Rest in peace, Prof. M. P. Singh.