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SC to decide merits, maintainability of Presidential reference on 2G

New Delhi, Jul 18: The Supreme Court today said it will hear all the issues framed by it on the Presidential Reference on the 2G spectrum verdict and its decision on objections on maintainability and

India TV News Desk Updated on: July 18, 2012 18:29 IST
sc to decide merits maintainability of presidential
sc to decide merits maintainability of presidential reference on 2g

New Delhi, Jul 18: The Supreme Court today said it will hear all the issues framed by it on the Presidential Reference on the 2G spectrum verdict and its decision on objections on maintainability and the merits of the case will be pronounced together.





After hearing five days of extensive arguments on the maintanibility of the reference, a five-judge constitution bench headed by Chief Justice S H Kapadia said instead of passing its order on the maintainability at this stage, it would hear every aspect, including the merits of the reference before arriving at its opinion.

The bench asked Attorney General G E Vahanvati to commence from tomorrow Government's arguments on the merits of the reference.

“We will hear the matter on the entire issue. We will decide the reference on merits and also on the initial objection on its maintainability at the end,” said the bench, also comprising justices D K Jain, J S Khehar, Dipak Mishra and Ranjan Gogai.

The reference covers various issues arising out of the apex court's 2G spectrum case verdict including whether auctioning of natural resources across all sectors is mandatory andwhether the verdict in the 2G case can be given retrospective effect for radio waves granted since 1994.  

The court had on May 11 issued notices and sought responses also from state governments and FICCI and CII on behalf of the private industries along with those of the NGO, Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL) and Janata Party President Subramanian Swamy.

It was on the petitions by CPIL and Swamy that a bench of justices G S Singhvi and A K Ganguly (since retired) had delivered its February 2 verdict which cancelled 122 telecom licences holding that the first-come-first-served policy was illegal and unconstitutional.
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