5 September 2017

Does the military need Armed Forces Tribunals?


The AFT was intended to reduce military related cases in civil courts.

Instead, the backlog in defence-related cases has increased from 9,000 to 16,000 after the AFT's creation.

In an important move towards reforming departmental justice across the board, but especially for the military, the Supreme Court issued the central government a show cause notice on August 25, asking why its recently promulgated rules for the Armed Forces Tribunal should not be struck down.

The apex court was responding to a writ petition, filed by Punjab and Haryana high court lawyer and founding president of the AFT Bar Association, Navdeep Singh, through Supreme Court lawyer Aishwarya Bhati, seeking reforms of the AFT and a check on 'excessive tribunalisation'.

Soldiers, sailors and airmen are required to petition the AFT for justice, rather than civil courts.

The AFT was intended to reduce military related cases in civil courts. Instead, as the Singh-Bhati petition points out, the backlog in defence-related cases has increased from 9,000 to 16,000 after creation of the AFT.

Legal experts have assailed the government's creation of more and more departmental tribunals and the concentration of powers in their hands, as a ploy to bypass the independent judicial system.

"A departmental tribunal takes a large number of cases out of the courts and places them under a quasi-judicial departmental body. Next, the government takes control of the appointment and functioning of the officers who sit on the tribunal, keeping them under the government's thumb." explains a prominent legal expert.

The petition says this is evident from the new AFT rules, which were promulgated by the finance ministry on June 1, based on an enabling provision in the Finance Act, which Parliament passed as a money bill in April.

The new rules decrease the tenure of AFT judges from four years to three; do away with the need for consultation with the Chief Justice of India before appointing AFT judges; and tweak the rules for the selection procedure, effectively permitting two secretary-rank officers on the Selection Committee to choose the judges they want.

There were already grave questions over the AFT's independence, since it functions administratively under the ministry of defence, which is the first respondent in most cases filed by soldiers, sailors and airmen before the AFT.

Further, Right to Information requests have highlighted the MoD's patronage of AFT judges.

The MoD admitted spending over Rs 67 lakhs for 'official foreign visits' by AFT chairperson and members, and providing judges with unauthorised canteen cards to shop at subsidised military retail outlets.

Apparently hoping to influence judgments, the ministry admitted to inviting AFT judges to army units to 'sensitise' them about cases before them.

In November 2012, the Punjab and Haryana high court ordered that the AFT be placed under the ministry of law and justice.

The MoD has appealed this verdict in the Supreme Court, but bypassed the process by promulgating new rules this year.

The petition heard on August 25 notes that the government had itself termed departmental tribunals a 'stopgap arrangement' and sought a road map for reforming tribunals and returning certain jurisdictions back to the regular courts.

The petition also questions why the regular judiciary is not being strengthened instead of resorting to excessive tribunalisation.

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