Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Belying
the
current
climate
of
political
polarisation,
one
issue
that's
witnessing
bipartisan
support
in
Parliament
is
the
effort
to
overturn
the
Supreme
Court's
dilution
of
the
SC/ST
(Prevention
of
Atrocities)
Act.
The
apex
court
in
March
had
ruled
regarding
the
misuse
of
the
Act,
prescribing
that
there
wouldn't
be
any
automatic
arrests,
and
that
preliminary
inquiries
would
be
carried
out
before
lodging
FIRs.
It
had
also
introduced
the
provision
of
anticipatory
bail
under
the
law.
This
was
done
in
light
of
NCRB
data
that
15-16%
of
the
total
complaints
filed
in
2015
under
the
Act
were
found
to
be
false
and
out
of
the
cases
disposed
of
by
courts
75%
had
resulted
in
acquittals
or
withdrawals.
However,
the
apex
court
decision
upset
Dalit
legislators
and
social
groups.
Government
now
wants
to
bring
in
an
amendment
in
the
current
session
of
Parliament
to
overturn
the
Supreme
Court
order,
while
opposition
parties
contend
that
an
ordinance
to
this
effect
should
have
been
brought
months
ago.
Clearly,
both
camps
are
vying
for
Dalit
votes
here,
especially
in
light
of
upcoming
elections.
But
stringent
laws
that
are
frequently
misused
defeat
the
aim
of
justice.
Misuse
of
the
SC/ST
Act
can
ironically
reinforce
caste
hate.
Understandably,
there
are
concerns
that
given
how
deep-rooted
the
caste
system
is
in
this
country,
marginalised
Dalits
may
not
get
their
grievances
redressed
by
prejudiced
upper-caste
policemen.
But
this
should
be
addressed
through
police
reforms.
Police
forces
need
to
be
sensitised
about
caste
atrocities
and
their
capacities
expanded
to
take
action
in
such
cases.
In
that
sense,
enacting
harsh
laws
is
the
easy
way
out.
Only
heavy
lifting
in
the
form
of
police
reforms
can
prevent
both
–
atrocities
against
Dalits
and
misuse
of
law.
That's
the
path
to
true
justice.
India
s
benchmark
stock
indices
are
roaring
again,
with
the
Nifty
and
the
Sensex
scaling
all-time
highs
on
Friday,
crossing
the
11,200
and
37,300
levels,
respectively.
A
result
largely
of
increased
buying
by
foreign
institutional
investors
and
expectations
of
strong
first-quarter
earnings
results,
it
took
the
Sensex
just
13
trading
sessions
to
move
from
36,000
to
37,000
points.
Coming
after
both
indices
witnessed
extremely
sharp
corrections
a
few
months
ago,
the
rally
has
occurred
when
other
emerging
market
indices
have
failed
to
recover
their
losses
since
the
fall
in
February.
The
swift
recovery,
however,
is
not
reflective
of
a
secular
rise.
While
the
sharp
market
correction
in
February
hit
stocks
across
the
board,
this
rally
has
been
limited
to
a
few
pockets
of
the
market.
Heavyweight
blue-chip
stocks
such
as
HDFC,
Reliance
Industries,
ITC,
Tata
Consultancy
Services
and
Infosys
have
contributed
the
most
while
many
others
have
lagged
behind.
Almost
half
the
companies
in
the
Nifty
still
trade
below