The court said such form of strikes hit the state's economy and image.
"Not a man moves, not a vehicle runs, not even a mouse stirs. If anybody violates the agitators -- usually political parties -- dictates and stirs out, or opens office or shop, violence and wanton destruction are the never-failing nemeses. Disruption defines hartal," the court said in a recent order.
For the uninitiated into Kerala's ways of public life, hartal -- a camouflaged bandh banned long back -- was a phenomenon to be watched and worried about, a division bench of Acting Chief Justice Antony Dominic and Justice Dama Seshadri Naidu said.
"Everyone -- the banker, the baker, the butcher, the student, the shopkeeper -- suffers. The economy suffers, the system suffers, the state's image suffers," the court said in its January 5 order.
It made the observations while upholding a November 11, 2016 judgement of a single-judge bench, awarding a compensation of Rs seven lakh to a driver, who lost his eye in stone-pelting by a mob, owing allegiance to a political party during a hartal called by it.
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