Supreme court lays down haj directions
The Supreme Court on Tuesday directed the government to frame a five-year policy for regulating the Haj pilgrimage to replace the current annual plan which it termed as “ad-hoc and unsatisfactory”.
The apex court also held the government’s policy allowing repeaters to accompany lady and elderly pilgrims as “mehrams” (unmarriageable kin), but without availing subsidy, as “legal, constitutional, fair and reasonable”.
“We accept the suggestion of the Amicus and hold that the practice of framing haj policy on an annual basis is quite ad-hoc and unsatisfactory and must be replaced by a policy framework made for a period of five years. We, accordingly, direct that the Haj policy that is to be framed in 2012 would be for a period of five years and would be called the Haj Policy 2013-2017,” the court said.
A bench comprising justices Aftab Alam and Ranjana Prakash Desai directed that “the haj policy should pay attention to special needs of the lady pilgrims and it should be aimed at making the pilgrimage for lady pilgrims as smooth and trouble-free as possible.”
The court also accepted the suggestion that the entire haj process must be completed in a time bound manner with permissible grace periods where practicable and schedule for making applications, scrutiny etc should be published in advance with firm cut-off dates in the haj policy itself so that the public at large is informed about dates to be be treated as inflexible.
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