Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
India

In A Landmark Judgment, Indian Supreme Court Prohibits Politicians' Photos On Government Ads

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 May, 2015 10:47 PM
    In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court on Wednesday prohibited the use of photographs of political leaders, including ministers, in advertisements issued by the government and its agencies, saying that it leads to promotion of a personality cult.
     
    A bench of Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose however permitted the use of photographs of the president, prime minister, Chief Justice of India and departed leaders, including Father of the Nation, in such advertisements.
     
    Holding that the government advertisements in connection with an event along with the photograph of a state or party functionary has a tendency of associating that individual with the achievements sought to highlighted, the court said that such media blitz has a "potential of developing the personality cult" around such state functionary.
     
    "Photographs, therefore, have the potential of developing the personality cult and the image of a one or a few individuals which is a direct antithesis of democratic functioning", said Justice Gogoi pronouncing the judgment. 
     
    "We are, therefore of the view, there should be an exception (in carrying the photograph along with the advertisement) only in the case of the president, prime minister and Chief Justice of the country who may themselves decide the question," the judgment said.
     
    In this respect, the court departed from the recommendation of the N.R. Madhava Menon committee which had recommended publication of the photographs of the president, prime minister, governor or chief minister along with the advertisements.
     
    The court said that the advertisements issued to "commemorate the anniversaries of acknowledged personalities like the Father of the Nation would of course carry the photograph of the departed leader".
     
    Two NGOs had approached the court seeking directions to restrain the central and state governments from using public funds on government advertisements that were primarily intended to project individual functionaries of the government or the party in power.
     
    While "approving and adopting" most of the recommendations of the Madhvan Menon Committee, the court did not accept recommendations on the appointment of an ombudsman, with regard to performance audit by each ministry and an embargo on advertisements on the eve of the elections.
     
    Not accepting the recommendation for an ombudsman, it said: "We are of the view that for ironing out the creases that are bound to show from time to time in the implementation of the present directions and to oversee such implementation, the government should constitute a three member body consisting of persons with unimpeachable neutrality and impartiality and who have excelled in their respective fields."
     
    Saying that it did not feel any necessity of performance/special audit as the "machinery available is adequate to ensure due performance as well as accountability and proper utilization of public money", the court said if government adhere to the "objects and parameters" mentioned by it, "we do not feel the necessity of imposing a special curb on government advertisements on the eve of the elections".

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Money Laundering: Chandigarh Lawyers' Driver, Clerks Swiped Crores Of Rupees

    Money Laundering: Chandigarh Lawyers' Driver, Clerks Swiped Crores Of Rupees
    The driver alone had transactions of over Rs.22 crore in his accounts. The staff, and the lawyer himself, are now being investigated by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) for alleged money laundering after officials seized documents of properties and accounts worth over Rs.500 crore - the biggest money laundering scam to have hit this city.

    Money Laundering: Chandigarh Lawyers' Driver, Clerks Swiped Crores Of Rupees

    Foreigners Living In India Laud 'Clean India' Drive

    Foreigners Living In India Laud 'Clean India' Drive
    Foreigners who came to India for work or love and decided to make the country their home are upbeat about Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ambitious "Clean India" campaign. They, however, cautioned that the execution of the mission remains a "big challenge".

    Foreigners Living In India Laud 'Clean India' Drive

    Obama Arrives In India On January 25, Talks To See 'Substantive Outcomes'

    Obama Arrives In India On January 25,  Talks To See 'Substantive Outcomes'
    Obama, who is arriving on the invitation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who he has called a "man of action", would arrive on Air Force One at 10 a.m. to a flurry of activities, which would culminate in a visit to Agra to see the Taj Mahal.

    Obama Arrives In India On January 25, Talks To See 'Substantive Outcomes'

    Gangster Sukhbir Singh Kahlwan Shot Dead By Rival Gang In Punjab Police Custody, Officials Shifted

    Gangster Sukhbir Singh Kahlwan Shot Dead By Rival Gang In Punjab Police Custody, Officials Shifted
    The day-light gunning down of a notorious gangster by a rival gang while he was being escorted by a Punjab Police team in the state's Phagwara town, has led to disciplinary action against senior police officials.

    Gangster Sukhbir Singh Kahlwan Shot Dead By Rival Gang In Punjab Police Custody, Officials Shifted

    BJP Is Exactly Opposite To What Bedi Stands For: Arvind Kejriwal

    BJP Is Exactly Opposite To What Bedi Stands For: Arvind Kejriwal
    AAP leader and former Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal has said he sees an inherent contradiction between what Kiran Bedi, BJP's presumptive chief ministerial candidate, was known to have stood for and the values and principles of the party she now represents.

    BJP Is Exactly Opposite To What Bedi Stands For: Arvind Kejriwal

    Indian Designers Picture Michelle Obama In A Sari

    Indian Designers Picture Michelle Obama In A Sari
    A navy blue knee-length dress, an off-shoulder gown or a floral dress - the First Lady of the US has worn them all. But on her forthcoming visit to India, desi designers wish she drapes different styles of the six-yard wonder - whether chiffons or traditional Benarasi weaves.

    Indian Designers Picture Michelle Obama In A Sari