HC rejects plea seeking disqualification of Modi, suggests medical help for litigant

  • | Thursday | 4th July, 2024

The Delhi High Court on Wednesday rejected a plea seeking disqualification of Prime Minister Narendra Modi from contesting elections and said that person who filed the plea appeared to be suffering from mental health issues. A Division Bench of Acting Chief Justice Manmohan and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela asked the local Station House Officer (SHO), Sub-Divisional Magistrate (SDM)  and the District Judge to keep a watch on the petitioner, Captain Deepak Kumar  and exercise their powers under the Mental Healthcare Act, if necessary. The bench said they were in agreement with the single judge, who had earlier rejected the plea, that the petition and the appeal are replete with unsubstantiated, disjointed, scandalous and preposterous allegations."Are you well?" an exasperated bench asked the appellant, adding he needs medical help. The plea has alleged that Prime Minister Narendra Modi was hatching a conspiracy and was involved in an act of terrorism. The plea further alleged that Modi and his accomplices attempted to destabilise national security by planning a fatal crash of an Air India flight in 2018 which the petitioner commanded as a pilot. He alleged that Modi made a false oath or affirmation which otherwise must be made after the nomination paper has been submitted to RO (returning officer). While dismissing the plea, the bench said, All the allegations in the present appeal are a figment of imagination of the appellant and bereft of any material particulars."During the hearing, the bench said, Are you well? Your application is inchoate. It is going from one end of the spectrum to another. It is going from they have taken false oaths to the three people you are naming be debarred from contesting elections to saying that the plane you were flying crashed to your daughter being missing to some former CJI trying to kill you. Are you well? No human being can understand the petition. Responding, the petitioner said, Yes I am well, Sir. The petition is very clear, Sir. Yes, my daughter is being kidnapped, there is a police report to this effect. I was also kidnapped and taken to a police station where they bargained with me that if I keep my mouth shut, they will hand over my child back to me. The bench told him the plea makes no sense and the single judge was right in holding that it was replete with unsubstantiated allegations.While dictating the order, the division bench said it was of the opinion that the appellant, if not suffering from hallucination, is conjuncting facts and certainly needs medical help. But the appellant insists he is well and needs no medical help. However, keeping in view the provisions of the Mental Health Act, this court directs the SHO of the local police station, SDM and district judge to keep a watch on the appellant and if required, may exercise the discretion conferred on them, individually or collectively, under the said statute, it said. On May 30, the single judge had rejected the plea saying the allegations levelled were reckless and unsubstantiated and the petition was tainted with malafide and oblique motives and such averments in a petition cannot be entertained.

If You Like This Story, Support NYOOOZ

NYOOOZ SUPPORTER

NYOOOZ FRIEND

Your support to NYOOOZ will help us to continue create and publish news for and from smaller cities, which also need equal voice as much as citizens living in bigger cities have through mainstream media organizations.


Stay updated with all the Delhi Latest News headlines here. For more exclusive & live news updates from all around India, stay connected with NYOOOZ.

Related Articles