Justice S. Muralidhar has made a mark both from the Bench and in the Bar. As an advocate, he was National Human Rights Commission’s lawyer and was appointed amicus curiae (‘friend of the court’) by the Supreme Court in a series of PILs challenging the death penalty. As a lawyer, Justice Muralidhar also worked for the victims of the 1984 Bhopal Gas Tragedy with a tenacity that spanned over 10 years, right up until he was made a judge of the Delhi High Court in 1996.
Satinath Sarangi, an activist who has for long been running a free medical clinic in Bhopal for the gas victims, remembers Justice Muralidhar as “extremely devoted and caring.” “He fought in the Supreme Court for giving the victims the ‘interest’ on the compensation that they were entitled to” said Sarangi. “It is because of him that 500,000 victims got 1500 crore rupees from the government.”
Sensitivity to those lesser-able or disadvantaged, a belief in the “equality” and “inclusiveness” that the Constitution guarantees, and courage — these judges had tested their beliefs before. Those beliefs were only waiting for their next articulation. It just so happened that it was in a case that expands the very idea of India.