The
Supreme Court on Friday dismissed a plea challenging the Delhi High Court's
decision refusing to direct the lieutenant governor to give assent to or return
a 2015 bill which proposed a ban on screening children for nursery admissions.
A
bench of Justice SK Kaul and Justice Sudhanshu Dhulia said it cannot pass a
direction to enact a law.
"Can
there be a mandamus to enact a law? Can we direct the government to introduce
the bill? Supreme Court can't be the panacea for everything," the bench
said.
The
high court had on July 3 dismissed a PIL filed by NGO Social Jurist, saying it
cannot interfere with the legislative procedure and direct the L-G to either
give assent to the Delhi School Education (Amendment) Bill, 2015, or return it.
The
organisation, through advocate Ashok Agarwal, filed the appeal in the top court
saying the child-friendly bill banning the screening procedure in nursery
admission in schools has been hanging between the Central and the Delhi
government for the last seven years without any justification and against the
public interest and opposed to public policy.
Rejecting
the PIL, a division bench of the Delhi High Court had said it was not proper
for a high court while exercising its jurisdiction under Article 226 of the
Constitution to direct a governor, who is a constitutional authority, to set a
time frame in matters which come purely within his domain.
"In
the considered opinion of this court, even though the bill has been passed by
the House, it is always open to the governor to agree or to send the bill back
to the House and this court ought not pass a writ of mandamus directing the
governor to act," the high court had said.
The
appeal against the high court's judgement said it highlighted that the very
objective and purpose of the 2015 bill is to protect children from exploitation
and unjust discrimination in nursery admission in private schools.
The
purpose of the bill was defeated by the delay, it said, adding the Delhi
government had got the legislation passed by the assembly way back in 2015. The
Bill, it said, was passed keeping in mind the 2013 decision of the Delhi High
Court on a PIL filed by the Social Jurist.
The
high court had said in 2013 that the government may consider making necessary
amendments to the law to ensure that children seeking nursery admission also
get the benefits of the Right to Education Act.
The
2009 law provides for free and compulsory education of all children in the age
group of 6 to 14 years as a fundamental right.
The
NGO said it made a representation to the authorities on March 21, 2023,
requesting them to urgently finalise the Bill. However, on April 11, a response
was received from the Centre stating the bill was yet to be finalised by the
two governments.
It
said more than 1.5 lakh admissions take place at nursery level every year in
private schools in Delhi and children above three years of age are subjected to
screening which is against the letter and spirit of the Right to Education Act,
2009.
It
had sought the court's direction to the authorities to expedite the process of
finalisation of the Bill so far as it relates to the prohibition of screening
in admission at the pre-primary level.