Will consider live streaming of proceedings in Ayodhya case says Supreme Court
New Delhi, Sep 16: The Supreme Court has sought details from the registry on whether the proceedings in the Ayodhya case can be live-streamed. The court said that it would consider this request and would seek details from the registry, whether it could be done or not.
The petition, filed by former RSS ideologue K N Govindacharya, came up for hearing before a bench comprising justices R F Nariman and Surya Kant.
Senior
advocate
Vikas
Singh,
representing
Govindacharya,
said
if
live
telecast
of
Ayodhya
case
proceedings
was
not
possible
then
at
least
audio
recording
or
transcription
of
hearing
should
be
done.
He
referred
to
the
court's
last
year's
verdict
allowing
live-streaming
of
court
proceedings
of
cases
of
constitutional
and
national
importance
to
buttress
his
arguments.
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"At the same time, it (last year verdict) also says that exclude sensitive matters," the bench told Singh.
Singh argued that Ayodhya case was sensitive and of importance.
"We are open court but not for outsiders. We are open court for litigants only," he said, adding, "It cannot be said that this (Ayodhya) is not a matter of national or constitutional importance."
Govindacharya, in his plea, has referred to the September 26, 2018 verdict of the court which had allowed live-streaming of court proceedings of cases of constitutional and national importance, saying this openness was like "sunlight" which is the "best disinfectant".
The plea has said the top court was hearing the Ayodhya matter even on miscellaneous days -- Fridays and Mondays -- which shows that it was dealing with the matter extraordinarily and therefore, audio-recording could be "started immediately".
A five-judge Constitution bench is hearing the Ayodhya case from August 6 to decide the politically-sensitive Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid land dispute, after the efforts to arrive at an amicable settlement through mediation failed.