The apex court referred to the criminal history of Shahabuddin and said "till today, he has been booked in 75 cases, out of which he had been convicted in 10 cases and presently facing trial in 45 cases" and the facts showed that "this is not a normal and usual case".
"We direct the state of Bihar to transfer the third respondent, M Shahabuddin, from Siwan Jail, District Siwan to Tihar Jail, Delhi and hand over the prisoner to the competent officer of Tihar Jail after giving prior intimation for his transfer in Delhi.
In a related development, the apex court also decided to examine a plea seeking lodging of FIR against RJD supremo Lalu Prasad's son and Bihar Health Minister Tej Pratap Yadav, whose photograph was published in the media with an alleged sharp shooter close to Shahabuddin.
The verdict came on separate pleas filed by Asha Ranjan, the widow of slain Siwan-based journalist Rajdeo Ranjan, and Chandrakeshwar Prasad, whose three sons were killed in two separate incidents. They had sought shifting of the RJD strongman from Siwan jail to Tihar prison here.
"A fair trial is not what the accused wants in the name of fair trial. Fair trial must soothe the ultimate justice which is sought individually, but is subservient and would not prevail when fair trial requires transfer of the criminal proceedings," the bench, in its 87-page verdict, said.
It said the trial in pending cases against Shahabuddin "shall be conducted by video conferencing by the concerned trial court.
In its verdict, the court said, "the right to fair trial
Dealing with the right to fair trial as enshrined under Article 21 of the Constitution, the bench said it was the duty of the constitutional court to weigh and strike a balance between the individual and societal rights.
"The fair trial which is constitutionally protected as a substantial right under Article 21 and also the statutory protection, does invite for consideration a sense of conflict with the interest of the victim(s) or the collective/interest of the society.
Relying on the apex court judgement transferring another controversial leader from Bihar, Rajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav, to Tihar in a murder case, it noted that the right to fair trial "is not what the accused wants in the name of fair trial".
"A wrongful act of an individual cannot derogate the right of fair trial as that interest is closer, especially in criminal trials, to the Rule of Law. An accused cannot be permitted to jettison the basic fundamentals of trial in the name of fair trial," it noted.
It rejected Shahabuddin's plea that the court cannot take away the fundamental right to fair trial of an accused by transferring him to a jail outside the state.
Justice Misra, writing the judgement for the bench, noted
that Shahabuddin has been "declared as a history-sheeter type 'A', that is, who is beyond reform".
"...He has been booked in 15 cases where he has been in custody and one such case relates to the murder of the third son of the petitioner (Chandrakeshwar Prasad) and other two cases are of attempt to murder.
"This is not a normal and usual case. It has to be dealt with in the aforesaid factual matrix. A history-sheeter has criminal antecedents and sometimes becomes a terror in society," the apex court said.
It referred to various judgements and said the courts have considered the importance of "peaceful social order while cancelling" bail of an accused if it has been granted without taking proper note of criminal antecedents of the accused.
"The grievance of the victims, who have enormously and apparently suffered, deserves to be dealt with as per the law of the land and should not remain a mirage and a distant dream. As we find, both sides have propounded the propositions in extreme terms. And we have a duty to balance," it said.
The apex court however agreed with the submission of the RJD leader that the court, in exercise of its special power under Article 142 (enforcement of decrees and orders of the SC) of the Constitution, cannot curtail the fundamental rights of citizens.
It considered the facts that the Patna High Court had stayed the proceedings in some criminal cases and asked the High Court "to dispose of the said matters on their merits within four months hence. A copy of this order be sent to the Registrar General, High Court of Patna for placing the same before the learned Acting Chief Justice."
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