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Asian Tribune is published by World Institute For Asian Studies|Powered by WIAS Vol. 9 No. 326               

Kalkotta HC CJ walks out after national emblem misrepresentation on his chair pointed out

By Gopal Ethiraj, Chennai
Chennai, 23 November (Asiantribune.com):

Acting Chief Justice of Kolkatta High Court Bhaskar Bhattacharya walked out of a courtroom when a petitioner's lawyers pointed out that the chair he was sitting on had an incorrect representation of the national emblem.

The petition he had been hearing at that time, incidentally, was about faulty national
emblems engraved in several offices of the state and the Centre.

On Friday the public interest litigation (PIL) petition came up for hearing before acting Chief Justice Bhaskar Bhattacharya and Justice Prasenjit Mondal, filed by Kamal Dey, Editor and Publisher of a Bengali periodical, when the latter submitted that the Ashok Chakra was being used without the writing ‘Satyameva Jayate’ (Truth Triumphs), which is integral to the emblem.

In fact, a division Bench of the High Court had earlier held that the national emblem should have the writing below, and it was punishable under the Prevention of Insults of National Honours Act. Dey produced photographs before the court to show how the nation emblem was disregarded.

Lawyers submitted that the authorities concerned were not paying heed despite the court order to rectify the error and submit a compliance report within three weeks. It was at this stage that even the chief justice's chair, on which Mr. Justice Bhattacharya was sitting, did not have the ‘Satyameva Jayate’ inscription, it was pointed out by the petitioner’s lawyers.

Immediately the acting chief justice stood up and turned around to have a look at the emblem. He then summoned the registrar-general and asked him to rectify the mistake and left the room.

The fault, however, could not be rectified in a short time. The registrar-general then asked to replace the CJ's chair with an ordinary one. Justice Bhattacharya agreed, sat on that chair and resumed court proceedings after the recess.

- Asian Tribune -

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