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| Adventurous Bhim earns SC wrath | | ‘Don’t draw political mileage from yatra issue’ | | Early Times Reporter Jammu | July 4 The Panthers Party leader Bhim Singh who has knack for dragging all issues to the apex court of the country today earned wrath of Supreme Court Judges for seeking to draw political mileage out of the present controversy over Shri Amarnath Pilgrimage. Refusing to interfere in government decision of revoking the land transfer to Shri Amarnath Shrine Board, a Bench of Supreme Court cautioned Bhim Singh not extract political mileage out of it. Bhim Singh had filed a Public Interest Litigation in the Supreme Court in his personal capacity which came for hearing today. Among other things he also sought lifting of curfew on which Supreme Court observed that it is a law and order issue and beyond its jurisdiction. Reports reaching here, however, said that the Supreme Court directed the authorities to provide security to pilgrims stranded in the state due to the turmoil over the issue. "We cannot revoke a cabinet decision," a Bench headed by Justice Altamas Kabir said while declining to go into the question of directing the administration to lift the curfew from Jammu region, which witnessed violent protests against the revocation of the land transfer order. "We are not going to withdraw curfew. Lifting the curfew is beyond our jurisdiction," the Bench, also comprising Justice G S Singhvi said while hearing a PIL filed Bhim Singh, Chairman of the Jammu and Kashmir National Panthers Party. The Bench, however, allowed his prayer that adequate security and medical facilities be provided to stranded pilgrims to Amarnath and Vaishno Devi shrines. "Pilgrims either to Vaishno Devi or Amarnath Shrine be provided adequate security till they complete their pilgrimage and leave Jammu and Kashmir," the Bench said. It said various other issues and submissions including compensation to families of victims killed and injured in police firing during the protest could not be considered as these issues were not for the courts to decide and fell in the domain of the administration. While directing the authorities to provide medical facilities to residents in the curfew-hit areas, the Bench cautioned Singh, who had filed the PIL in his personal capacity, not to extract political mileage out of it. |
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