The Supreme Court will livestream all Constitutional Bench hearings from September 27 on its website, which means anyone can watch the proceedings in cases such as challenges to the Citizenship Amendment Act and the revocation of special status under Article 370 to Jammu and Kashmir.
The court had in 2018 ruled in favour of the livestreaming — as per citizen rights under Article 21 of the Constitution — but that remained to be implemented. This is a step towards that, starting with cases that deal with interpretation of the Constitution.
This is also among major decisions since the new Chief Justice of India (CJI), Uday Umesh Lalit, took office. He recently presided over a full court meeting where judges unanimously decided that livestreaming should begin with constitutional cases, and could later cover all proceedings.
A tangible move was made on August 26, when proceedings from the then CJI NV Ramana's court were livestreamed on his last day in office. Justice Ramana had formed a number of constitutional benches in his last week as CJI, as some matters were pending without hearing for years.
Questions about technology were, more or less, answered during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic, when courts functioned through video-conferencing. That led to a wider acceptance of the idea, though originally forced by a lack of options during the lockdowns.
A nudge came last week, when senior lawyer Indira Jaising — one of the petitioners in the 2018 case by law student Swapnil Tripathi — wrote to the judges to start the livestreaming in "matters of public and constitutional importance... to keep a permanent record of the arguments by counsel on all sides along with the proceedings of the court".
Besides other cases, she stressed that the arguments on the validity of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019, will deal with what secularism in the Indian Constitution — "and in that sense the idea of India itself" — means.
She also cited the streaming of ceremonial proceedings on the day of Justice Ramana's retirement to say that infrastructure is available.
There are reasons, however, why the court has been taking cautious steps.
Prominent Delhi lawyer Shadan Farasat wrote in The Indian Express last month: "With the advent of social media, every citizen became a potential journalist. This was seen as empowering initially... [But] the lack of editorial control has in fact meant informational anarchy, with fake news and propaganda dominating YouTube and social media feeds."
Yet, he underlined that "the case for livestreaming of SC cases of constitutional or national importance is quite strong". "Direct engagement is better than a process mediated through some Delhi-based lawyers or court reporters," he wrote, suggesting that "wholesale rejection of change is a recipe for stagnation", so the court must proceed with some terms and conditions.
The court did give out some instructions in its 2018 judgment, such as: "Re-use, capture, re-editing or redistribution, or creating derivative works or compiling of the broadcast or video footage, in any form, shall not be permitted except as may be notified in the terms and conditions of use and without the written permission of the Registry."
Petitioners had cited similar streaming in Canada, UK and Australia as examples.
Last year, a court committee also framed the Model Rules for Live-Streaming and Recording of Court Proceedings "aimed at bringing greater transparency, inclusivity and access to justice".
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