Court-room drama serials lie. Real court-rooms are calm,time-consuming,deliberative,even boring affairs. Passion is replaced by process; drama by documents. There is method to this monotony. Courts are places where facts are ascertained,laws interpreted,and the two put together by dispassionate judges. This requires that judges not prejudge,and not get swayed by either partisan passion or public perception; that the court be a temple of reason,where justice is as much delivery as perception,what you say as important as how you say it.
This is why Supreme Court Judge Arijit Pasayats recent comments were so jarring. He is reported to have said: A terrorist is not fit to be called human. Hes an animal,so what is required is animal rights. He was responding in part to the horror of the Mumbai attacks,and to the general fear in India that terrorism is finding new recruits. But the tone of his comments are in sharp contrast to the calmness and lack of emotion that presumably characterise his own in-court judgments. In cases as charged as these,where public emotion is high,it is important that the judiciary not be swayed by the street and avoid using words that would sway the street,in turn. Judges words that empower popular passion encourage those very un-judgelike figures,vigilantes; as well as those who would deny the basis of our legal system by denying the in-human,un-human terrorists representation.