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Article 32 enables people to approach SC for fundamental rights

Why in News?

  • Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai delivered a lecture on India and the Living Indian Constitution at 75 Years, emphasising the origins and significance of Article 32.
  • The two developments stirred national debate on the foundations of constitutional rightssocial reform legacies, and political misuse of historical narratives.

Relevance:

GS 2 – Polity

  • Fundamental rights enforcement, writ jurisdiction.
  • Article 32 as part of Basic Structure.
  • Constitutional morality, role of judiciary, Ambedkars vision.
  • Emergency provisions (Art. 359), judicial remedies.

What is Article 32?

  • Constitutional remedy for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
  • Guarantees the right to move the Supreme Court directly for rights violations.
  • Empowers the SC to issue five writs: Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Prohibition, Certiorari, Quo Warranto.
  • Dr. B.R. Ambedkar called it the “heart and soul of the Constitution.”

Ambedkar’s Vision (As Highlighted by CJI Gavai)

  • Rights without remedies are meaningless → Article 32 inserted to provide effective remedy, not mere declaration.
  • Objective Resolution (1946) lacked enforceability; Article 32 filled this gap.
  • Ambedkar wanted a Constitution that was living, evolving, enabled through Article 368 (amendments).
  • Constitution built on justice, liberty, equality, fraternity.

Advanced Constitutional Analysis

  • Article 32 is part of Basic Structure (SC in L. Chandra Kumar, 1997).
  • Remedies under Article 32 cannot be suspended except during Emergency (Art. 359).
  • Article 32 is simultaneously a Fundamental Right and a remedy mechanism.
  • CJI Gavai highlighted how debates of the Constituent Assembly remain critical to understanding constitutional morality.

Current Issues Highlighted by CJI Gavai

  • Need to safeguard Constitution from political distortion.
  • Need for citizens and lawyers to understand Constituent Assembly debates.
  • Amendments remain contentious → liberal vs restrictive interpretations.
  • Importance of continuing Ambedkar’s project of social and economic equality (DPSPs).

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