ADDRESS BY THE HON BLE PRESIDENT OF INDIA SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND ON THE OCCASION OF INAUGURATION OF CONSTITUTION DAY CELEBRATIONS

Similar documents
3. There are so many more who contribute to our Republic in diverse ways and whom I may have missed mentioning. Happy Republic Day to all of you.

ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF INDIA, SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND AT THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF CYPRUS September 3, 2018

OUR PURSUIT Develop a passion for learning. If you do, you will never cease to grow. Anthony J. Angelo

POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY UNDERLYING THE CONSTITUTION

ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF INDIA, SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND ON THE OCCASION OF INAUGURATION OF THE MAHATMA GANDHI INTERNATIONAL SANITATION CONVENTION

President Radi Secretary General Johnsson Secretary General-elect Chungong Excellencies Ladies and Gentlemen:

MOSCOW DECLARATION. (Moscow, 1 December 2017)

Address. Honourable Stephenson King. Prime Minister, Minister for Finance, Economic Affairs and National Development. on the occasion of Saint Lucia s

Law Day Speech * Mr. Minister, President and Secretary of SCBA, President. of Bar Association of India, my esteemed colleagues, Acting

ASEAN-CHINA STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP VISION 2030

JUSTICE HAS AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN FIRST PRINCIPLE OF SOCIAL AND POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS: VICE PRESIDENT 1

1 st Year Essay Answer

Joint UN Statement at the

10 th Southern Africa Civil Society Forum (27th-30th July 2014, Harare, Zimbabwe)

SOCIAL CHARTER OF THE AMERICAS. (Adopted at the second plenary session, held on June 4, 2012, and reviewed by the Style Committee)

Geneva, 26 October Ladies and gentlemen, I am very honoured to deliver this keynote speech today and I thank you for the invitation.

A Draft of the Co-operative Charter 1. Preamble

Forum Syd s Policy Platform

Asia Parliamentarians Forum on Dalit Concerns

Thank you David (Johnstone) for your warm introduction and for inviting me to talk to your spring Conference on managing land in the public interest.

Andhra Pradesh: Vision 2020

Korea s Anti-Corruption Strategies. and the Role of Private Sector

The Danish Refugee Council s 2020 Strategy

So today we pay homage to the founding fathers that helped set up this great institution.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

PAKISTAN PERMANENT MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS

New York. May 22, The Chinese Delegation supports the remarks delivered by Egypt yesterday on behalf of the Group of 77 and China.

Development Goals and Strategies

Partnership Framework

Prashant Mavani, is an expert in current affairs analysis and holds a MSc in Management from University of Surrey (U.K.).

The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia

Institute of Commonwealth Studies Conference: The Commonwealth and Challenges to Media Freedom

[Note: updated May 2007 to include 2006 General Convention resolutions]

It is a distinct honor for me to participate in this landmark Conference.

The 75th Anniversary Commemoration Initiative: Help Liberation Route Europe Keep the Memory of World War II Alive

Annex 1 Eligible Priority Sectors and Programme Areas Norwegian Financial Mechanism

Declaration of Quebec City

SHAPING AFRICA S FUTU RE. AWDF s Strategic Direction

The Voice of Children and Youth for Rio+20

ASEAN DEFENCE MINISTERS MEETING-PLUS (ADMM-PLUS) CONCEPT PAPER

PREPARED REMARKS FOR COMMERCE SECRETARY GARY LOCKE Asia Society and Woodrow Wilson Center event on Chinese FDI Washington, DC Wednesday, May 4, 2011

American Swiss Foundation Annual Gala Dinner New York, June 9, 2014

Keynote speech. The Mauritius International Arbitration Conference. Ms. Patricia O Brien Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs The Legal Counsel

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development

3 December 2014 Submission to the Joint Select Committee

Internet Policy and Governance Europe's Role in Shaping the Future of the Internet

LANGUAGE IN INDIA Strength for Today and Bright Hope for Tomorrow Volume 7 : 5 May 2007

WHO DISCUSSION PAPER

India - US Relations: A Vision for the 21 st Century

ALLOW me first, on behalf of the Government of the Republic of Kenya and of our national delegation here today, to

a co-operative agenda for Wales 2016

AS PREPARED FOR DELIVERY

15th Asia and the Pacific Regional Meeting Kyoto, Japan, 4 7 December 2011

THE FIFTH MEETING OF THE BRICS TRADE MINISTERS MOSCOW, 7 JULY 2015 JOINT COMMUNIQUE

Trends Shaping Education Highlights

BOARDS OF GOVERNORS 1999 ANNUAL MEETINGS WASHINGTON, D.C.

The United States & Latin America: After The Washington Consensus Dan Restrepo, Director, The Americas Program, Center for American Progress

INDEPENDENCE OF JUDICIARY UNDER INDIAN CONSTITUTION

ADDRESS BY H.E. DASHO TSHERING TOBGAY PRIME MINISTER OF BHUTAN AT THE 72*^ SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY 22" SEPTEMBER 2017

Prashant Mavani, is an expert in current affairs analysis and holds a MSc in Management from University of Surrey (U.K.).

Globalisation has radically transformed the contours

Mainstreaming gender perspectives to achieve gender equality: What role can Parliamentarians play?

The idea of the Preamble has been borrowed from the Constitution of USA. Preamble refers to the introduction or preface of the Constitution.

IAMCR Conference Closing Session: Celebrating IAMCR's 60th Anniversary Cartagena, Colombia Guy Berger*

1/24/2018 Prime Minister s address at Asian Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction

The Danish Courts an Organisation in Development

Draft Accra Declaration

Conclusion. Simon S.C. Tay and Julia Puspadewi Tijaja

Speech by Llyr Gruffydd AM, Shadow Minister for. Sustainable Communities, Energy and Food. BVA Annual Welsh Dinner on 1 July 2014 at Cardiff City Hall

Democratic Socialism versus Social Democracy -K.S.Chalam

Africa-EU Civil Society Forum Declaration Tunis, 12 July 2017

The year 1987 marks the 200th anniversary of the United. Reflections on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution.

THE NEW PARTNERSHIP FOR AFRICA S DEVELOPMENT (NEPAD) DECLARATION ON DEMOCRACY, POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

Cooperatives, Economic Democracy and Human Security: Perspectives from Nepal

CPG2B/BPZ6C BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT. Unit : I V

The European Parliament, the Council and the Commission solemnly proclaim the following text as the European Pillar of Social Rights

SECOND SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS Santiago Declaration April 18-19, 1998

Living Together, Growing Together is the Common Goal of China and the World

Asian African Parliamentary Declaration Towards stronger partnership for world peace and prosperity

Legal Week: Commercial Litigation and Arbitration Forum. Commercial Dispute Resolution Current Developments in the Commercial Court

Period 3: TEACHER PLANNING TOOL. AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework Evidence Planner

Industry Agenda. PACI Principles for Countering Corruption

EMBARGO UNTIL DELIVERY CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY Keynote speech by. Erna SOLBERG. Prime Minister of Norway

Accra Declaration. World Press Freedom Day Keeping Power in Check: Media, Justice and the Rule of Law

10 WHO ARE WE NOW AND WHO DO WE NEED TO BE?

PES Strategy A Mandate for Change

Address by Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa at the 60th Consumer Goods Forum Annual Global Summit, Cape Town International Convention Centre

Asia Europe Cooperation Framework 2000 Seoul 21 October 2000

Living in a Globalized World

MADRAS BAR ASSOCIATION INAUGURAL FUNCTION TO CELEBRATE THE COMMENCEMENT OF ITS 150 TH YEAR

3 rd WORLD CONFERENCE OF SPEAKERS OF PARLIAMENT

CONSTITUTION OF INDIA. Justice M. S. Sonak High Court of Bombay

European Pillar of Social Rights

Opening of the Judicial Year. Seminar

Save the Children s Commitments for the World Humanitarian Summit, May 2016

Social Services and the SDGs. 9th Conference for the Social work and Sustainable Development Goals Sharjah, UAE, Monday 23 April 2018

Now let s take a look at the individual important articles of India Constitution and what it stands for:

EMPOWERMENT OF THE WEAKER SECTIONS IN INDIA: CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS AND SAFEGUARDS

IFSW Europe e.v. Work Programme

Opening Ceremony of the Seminar Marking the 10th Anniversary of the Establishment of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC)

Transcription:

ADDRESS BY THE HON BLE PRESIDENT OF INDIA SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND ON THE OCCASION OF INAUGURATION OF CONSTITUTION DAY CELEBRATIONS New Delhi, November 26, 2018 1. I am glad to be here today to inaugurate the commemoration of Constitution Day, which is a landmark date on our national calendar. I extend warm greetings to all fellow citizens on this cherished day. I also welcome members of the judiciary from BIMSTEC countries for an occasion that is not only important for India, but is a celebration of universal values, and allows for mutual learning and sharing. 2. November 26 marks the day in 1949 when the Constitution of India was adopted by the Constituent Assembly. In 1979, on the 30 th anniversary of this momentous event, the Supreme Court began to observe the day as National Law Day. In 2015, to coincide with the 125 th birth anniversary of Babasaheb Dr Bhim Rao Ambedkar, the Union government decided to celebrate it as Constitution Day. This was an appropriate tribute to Dr Ambedkar, who was chair of the Drafting Committee of the Constituent Assembly and is remembered as the Chief Architect of the Constitution. 3. I would like to thank the Chief Justice of India, Shri Justice Ranjan Gogoi, for the invitation extended to me. I accepted immediately because Constitution Day has a special meaning for me, as I am sure it does for all of us. 4. November 26 is a sacred day in our constitutional history. Tragically, it also represents a date that saw an assault on the democratic values and freedoms that our Constitution grants us. I refer to the terror attacks in Mumbai on this day exactly 10 years ago. Those horrific images still remain in India s 1

collective memory. As a nation and a people we are honourbound to get justice for the individuals and families that suffered. The Constitution and its underlying principles commit us to this resolve. 5. The Constitution is the modern scripture of independent India. To use a Latin expression, it is our suprema lex. However, it is more than just a collection of articles and clauses. For us Indians it is an inspirational and living document, an ideal of the society we are and the even better society we are striving to be. These are aspirations that apply to not just India but to many emerging nations, including the BIMSTEC memberstates represented here. 6. Dr Ambedkar and his colleagues in the Constituent Assembly were remarkably large-hearted and generous in their approach. They allowed for flexibility in amending the Constitution and were accommodative of various streams of thought. Above all, they trusted the wisdom of future generations to expand the frontiers of freedom and liberty, justice and fraternity, fairness and equality. They trusted future generations to not just amend the Constitution s text, but to constructively re-imagine and re-interpret it for changing times. 7. If we continue to be true to this spirit, the Constitution can serve India for all times to come. 8. The Constitution formalised the separation of powers between the judiciary, the executive and the legislature. It gave all three pillars of the state legitimate roles and critical responsibilities to uphold the Constitution and realise its hopes and expectations. It also urged them to build a fraternal and parallel relationship. The duty of safeguarding and strengthening the Constitution is a shared enterprise among all three institutions, in partnership with the people of India. 2

9. The people of India are the ultimate custodians of the Constitution. It is in them that sovereignty vests and it is in their name that the Constitution was adopted. The Constitution empowers the citizen, but the citizen too empowers the Constitution by following it, by adhering to it, by protecting it, and by persevering to make it more meaningful with words and deeds. The Constitution is nobody s preserve and it is everybody s preserve. 10. Perhaps the most moving word in the Constitution is justice. Justice is a single word. Justice is a complex and liberating expression. And justice is both the means and the goal of our constitutional and nation-building process. 11. In the narrow sense of our legal system, justice is served when right and wrong are adjudicated upon in a courtroom. And more so when justice is accessible, affordable and quickly available to all citizens, irrespective of background. But justice must also be seen in a wider context in terms of society s evolution and its changing beliefs, lifestyles and technologies. 12. The Preamble to the Constitution guarantees to all Indian citizens: Justice social, economic and political. The Preamble is an irreplaceable aid to appreciating and interpreting the Constitution. If I could use a term with which the younger generation may be familiar, the Preamble is the source code of the Constitution. 13. In the Preamble, justice is not seen as unidimensional. It is viewed as having implications across political, economic and social spheres. Political justice implies the equal participation of all adults in the political process and the just formulation and implementation of laws. Economic justice implies the ultimate eradication of poverty, equal opportunities to earn a livelihood, and fair wages. As such the expansion of 3

economic, entrepreneurship and job opportunities are among examples of economic justice. 14. Given the diverse history of our people, and given imbalances and hierarchies that have sometimes marked our past, social justice remains a touchstone of our nation building. At the simplest level, it implies the removal of societal imbalances and the harmonisation of rival claims and needs of different communities and groups. Social justice is about providing equal opportunities. 15. Such a conceptualisation of justice was valid in 1949 and broadly remains relevant today. Even so, the 21st century has brought new challenges. No doubt the concept of justice - political, economic and social has a resilient core but it needs to be thought of in innovative ways. It requires to be applied afresh to emerging situations situations that may not have existed or been foreseen when our Constitution framers were at work. 16. Let us take some everyday examples. Political justice in the electoral arena does not stop with free and fair elections and with universal franchise. Or with the right of every citizen who meets age and other criteria to offer himself or herself as a candidate. Improving transparency in campaign finance, as the government is trying to do, is also an example of promoting political justice. Disruptions in parliamentary proceedings are an unfortunate occurrence. Some have suggested that these too be seen as encroachment on the citizen s understanding of justice. 17. Similarly, when the judiciary tries to find solutions to frequent adjournments, simply to delay cases and inconvenience the less-well-off litigant, it enhances the quality of justice. One year ago, I made a suggestion on this very platform to facilitate certified translated copies of court judgements in regional languages. This would help litigants 4

who were not familiar with the English language. I am glad that the Supreme Court, led by the Chief Justice of India very shortly after he took office, has initiated the process for certified translated copies in Hindi. Some High Courts are also issuing certified translated copies in local languages. By Constitution Day 2019, I look forward to all High Courts, across the country, implementing this practice. It will serve to widen the boundaries of justice. 18. In India, the idea of social justice too has expanded to encompass modern civic parameters such as clean air; less polluted cities and towns, rivers and water bodies; sanitary and hygienic living conditions; and green and eco-friendly growth and development. These are all implications of environmental and climate justice, within the framework of social justice. If a child suffers from asthma due to air pollution I would consider that a gap in providing social justice. 19. Perhaps the most tantalising influence on justice is that of technology. This is especially so because we live in an era of rapid and enormous technological change of Big Data and automation, and of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Technology is an enhancer of justice as well as a challenge. It calls for us to think of technology justice as a subset of economic justice. This is very true in the context of access to technology for our poorer and less-privileged fellow citizens. 20. Technology has made huge contributions to our quality of life. Innovations in agricultural technology that began with the Green Revolution have made India self-sufficient in food and have rolled back hunger. New vaccines and life-saving drugs have eradicated diseases and improved life expectancy. The telecom surge has reduced distances and allowed businesses to become more efficient. And the Internet has made knowledge democratic and accessible. Information is no longer a privilege, it is a commodity. 5

21. Innovation has also worked for the benefit of disadvantaged sections of society. A case in point is India s experience with technology-enabled, Aadhar-linked direct benefit transfers. These have plugged corruption, leakages and exclusion from India s welfare programmes. 22. Innovation and technology have brought gains. But they have also brought questions of access and privacy. For example, there is the dilemma of weighing data privacy against the use of data for the greater common good. Within these competing imperatives lie competing notions of justice. And such issues will probably stay with us through the 21 st century. 23. The adoption of the Constitution was a milestone in India s democratic journey. Over the past seven decades, as democracy has deepened, so has the demand for justice. The expansion of the idea of justice is a consequence of an informed and demanding citizenry attempting to forge a new social contract with a responsive state. 24. When I say state, I don t mean just government. The priority to be responsive is there for all our institutions, public as well as private. We are in an age when public services and public goods are increasingly being delivered by the private sector. Education, health, housing, urban transport and telecom and Internet access are examples. The expansion of justice creates a greater role for non-state players as well. Any future safeguarding and strengthening of the Constitution and upholding of justice in its various forms will require the participation of both public and private stakeholders. Justice has as many stakeholders as India has citizens. 25. Before I conclude, I must point out that we are about to enter a very important year. November 26, 2019, exactly 12 months from now, would mark the 70 th anniversary of the 6

adoption of the Constitution. Let us make the coming year worth this anniversary not necessarily by organising events and commemorations, but by giving the constitutional ethic a greater salience in all our thinking and all our action. 26. In particular, we must strive to improve awareness about the Constitution and the rights and responsibilities that it gives us. It is a paradox that our citizens, in whose name the Constitution was adopted, are sometimes not sufficiently informed about what the Constitution means for us for each of us. Let the 70 th year of its adoption be dedicated to enhancing awareness about the Constitution. Let this become a national mission, with the media and social media playing a crucial role. I am confident that we would have achieved much on this count when we meet again a year from today. 27. With those words, I wish all of you the very best for the rest of the day s proceedings. Thank you, Jai Hind! 7