Supreme Court refuse urgent hearing of pleas challenging ban imposed on Students Islamic Movement of India

Supreme Court refuse urgent hearing of pleas challenging ban imposed on Students Islamic Movement of India

Today, the Supreme Court of India has refused to grant urgent hearing on number of pleas challenging, a ban imposed on the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI).

The division bench of Justices S K Kaul and Sudhanshu Dhulia directs Counsel to approach the court once the hearing on the issue of Article 370 of the Constitution is over.

The lawyer told the bench that the matter came up for hearing on January 18 and has not been listed since then.

 “Next week, hearing in the Constitution bench (on Article 370) is starting. Mention it after it is over.”, said the bench. 

Earlier, the Central government submitted to the Supreme court that the objective of the said movement is to establish Islamic rule in India cannot be allowed to subsist and that the activists of the banned outfit are still indulging in disruptive activities that are capable of threatening the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

In a counter-affidavit filed in the apex court, which is hearing a batch of pleas on the ban imposed on the SIMI, the Centre had said the activists of the organisation are in “regular touch” with their associates and masters based in other countries and their actions could disrupt peace and communal harmony in India.

The affidavit said the evidence brought on record clearly establishes that despite being banned since September 27, 2001, except for a brief period in between, the SIMI activists are associating, meeting, conspiring, acquiring arms and ammunition, and indulging in activities, “which are disruptive in character and capable of threatening the sovereignty and territorial integrity of India”.

 
 
 
Share this News

Website designed, developed and maintained by webexy