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Top court bans entry over cap

Mansoor Ahmad, a law student from Aligarh Muslim University, has been barred from entering the courtrooms of the country’s top court because he wears a cap. The 24-year-old came to the Supreme Court with 82 other students for an internship programme that started on March 10, but was asked to remove the cap. Satya Prakash tells more...

Updated on: Apr 02, 2010 01:08 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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Mansoor Ahmad, a law student from Aligarh Muslim University, has been barred from entering the courtrooms of the country’s top court because he wears a cap.

HT Image
HT Image

The 24-year-old came to the Supreme Court with 82 other BA LL.B. final-year students for an internship programme that started on March 10.

“After two-three days, I was told by a security guard in front of the CJI’s court to remove my cap before entering. When I asked why, he said it was against court decorum,” Ahmad said.

“I offered to get my cap checked but they were not ready to let me in with my cap on,” Ahmad, who is from Kashmir, told HT.

Thereafter, he started attending proceedings in courtrooms at the back of the premises. “But after a few days, the security men there too stopped me from entering with my cap,” he said.

Ahmad does not want to remove his cap as he says lawyers are allowed to wear caps as part of their sherwani-pajama dress code. Also, he wears it for religious reasons.

After failing to make any headway with the court authorities, Ahmad filed a right to information application and is waiting for a response. Supreme Court secretary general M.P. Bhadran said: “It’s a question of decorum in court. It has nothing to do with religion.”

 
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