<p>A bench of justices P Sathasivam and B S Chauhan, however, declined to issue notice to Union Home Minister P Chidambaram and HRD Minister Kapil Sibal for the incident.<br /><br />The apex court passed the direction while posting to September 2 the writ petition filed by J&K Panthers Party chief Professor Bhim Singh.<br /><br />The apex court sought to clarify that it would go into the larger issue as to whether a citizen's fundamental right is violated and was not confining it to Hazare.<br />The bench asked Singh as to whether he obtained the consent of Hazare before filing the petition.<br />"Tomorrow he (Hazare) may ask as to why you are interfering with my protest," the bench remarked.<br />The apex court further clarified that it had laid down the law relating to preventive detention under section 107/151 of CrPC.</p>.<p>The writ petition was filed by Singh challenging the detention and arrest of Hazare on August 16 hours before he was to launch his fast against corruption.<br /><br />Singh, in his petition, had sought notices to Chidambaram and Sibal besides the Union Home Secretary and the Delhi Police Commissioner.<br /><br />In his petition, Singh has alleged that the Centre and Delhi Police had "acted in a malafide manner" to arrest and detain Hazare and stifling his fundamental right to free speech and liberty guaranteed under Articles 19, 21 and 22.<br /><br />He has accused the police of invoking CrPC provisions of 107/151 to detain Hazare for merely espousing the cause of a strong Jan Lokpal Bill and weeding out corruption from the country.<br /><br />He urged the court to declare Hazare's detention as "unconstitutional" and "violative of his fundamental rights" guaranteed under the relevant provisions of the Constitution.<br /><br />Singh, who had filed the petition at the time of Hazare's August 16 arrest, had also sought physical production of the Gandhian through the habeas corpus (production) plea.<br /><br />But since Hazare was released by the Government subsequently, the plea for his production has now become infructous. </p>
<p>A bench of justices P Sathasivam and B S Chauhan, however, declined to issue notice to Union Home Minister P Chidambaram and HRD Minister Kapil Sibal for the incident.<br /><br />The apex court passed the direction while posting to September 2 the writ petition filed by J&K Panthers Party chief Professor Bhim Singh.<br /><br />The apex court sought to clarify that it would go into the larger issue as to whether a citizen's fundamental right is violated and was not confining it to Hazare.<br />The bench asked Singh as to whether he obtained the consent of Hazare before filing the petition.<br />"Tomorrow he (Hazare) may ask as to why you are interfering with my protest," the bench remarked.<br />The apex court further clarified that it had laid down the law relating to preventive detention under section 107/151 of CrPC.</p>.<p>The writ petition was filed by Singh challenging the detention and arrest of Hazare on August 16 hours before he was to launch his fast against corruption.<br /><br />Singh, in his petition, had sought notices to Chidambaram and Sibal besides the Union Home Secretary and the Delhi Police Commissioner.<br /><br />In his petition, Singh has alleged that the Centre and Delhi Police had "acted in a malafide manner" to arrest and detain Hazare and stifling his fundamental right to free speech and liberty guaranteed under Articles 19, 21 and 22.<br /><br />He has accused the police of invoking CrPC provisions of 107/151 to detain Hazare for merely espousing the cause of a strong Jan Lokpal Bill and weeding out corruption from the country.<br /><br />He urged the court to declare Hazare's detention as "unconstitutional" and "violative of his fundamental rights" guaranteed under the relevant provisions of the Constitution.<br /><br />Singh, who had filed the petition at the time of Hazare's August 16 arrest, had also sought physical production of the Gandhian through the habeas corpus (production) plea.<br /><br />But since Hazare was released by the Government subsequently, the plea for his production has now become infructous. </p>