SPEECHES[Back]

May 8, 2010
New Delhi


PM's speech at the Golden Jubilee Celebrations of the Bar Association of India

It gives me great pleasure to participate in the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the Bar Association of India. The Association has always maintained very high standards of professional ethics and values. I applaud its achievements and congratulate all those who have been associated with it.

The Bar Association of India has a glorious history. It was inaugurated by the then President of India Dr. Rajendra Prasad fifty years ago in the presence of our first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, the then Chief Justice of India and many stalwarts of the legal profession whose names are held in highest esteem even today. Shri M.C. Setalvad, the first Attorney-General of India was the first President of the Association and together with the illustrious Dr K. M Munshi and Mr C.K. Daphtary and others framed its constitution. At the inaugural function

Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru had said "all these new problems come and these problems can be decided certainly, as far as lawyers are concerned, by specialized training and also by a certain amount of wisdom and a certain understanding of those problems, apart even from their judicial significance, because life is an integrated thing. You cannot separate it in compartments, some part of life meant only for lawyers and judges and some other part meant for somebody else. That is not so. In real life they all overlap and in a changing phase of society it becomes so necessary to have some integrated understanding of these various developments so as to be able to deal with it." With great humility and reverence I echo the same sentiments.

The role of lawyers is not confined to Courts alone or advising the clients in business deals. It extends to being an integral part of our system of administration of justice - and justice not just in the legal sense but justice - social, economic and political as set out in the preamble of our Constitution. Lawyers in our country have historically contributed handsomely to each of these areas of justice - whether it was the struggle for independence, the framing of our Constitution or just government. Even today in the Cabinet we have outstanding lawyers some of whom have been members of this illustrious Association.

The Bar Association too has a larger objective beyond the furtherance of professional interests. It aims at promoting public and national welfare in manifold directions and upholding the Constitution of India and the Rule of Law. One of the most outstanding features of activities of Association is its commitment to society, especially the less privileged sections. It is gratifying to note that it has contributed significantly at the time of natural and manmade calamities like the Latoor and Bhuj earthquakes and the Tsunami. The Association also performed yeoman services in providing legal aid to families of martyrs in the Kargil war.

The theme of this conference -- Law and Governance -- covers a complex relationship. The deliberations in the conference will explore how the practice of law has evolved over time and its interplay with political, social and economic developments, the socio-legal processes that deter or provide access to justice and above all the necessary legal pre-requisites of good governance.

I am told that one of the important sessions is devoted to the Law and Separation of Powers. The doctrine of "separation of powers" is acknowledged as one of the basic features of our Constitution. It is also commonly agreed that all the three organs of the State, i.e., the Legislature, the Judiciary, and the Executive are bound by and subject to the provisions of the Constitution, which demarcates their respective powers, jurisdictions, responsibilities and relationship with one another. It is assumed that none of the organs of the State, whether it is the judiciary or the executive or the legislature, would exceed its powers as laid down in the Constitution. Even though their jurisdictions may be separated and demarcated, it is expected that all institutions would work in harmony and in tandem to maximize the public good. I hope there will be meaningful discussions in the conference on this and other important subjects like funding of elections and law and education.

Let me conclude by wishing the conference all success. I also wish the Bar Association of India all the very best in the years to come. I am sure the deliberations in the conference will be productive and contribute to strengthening both the law and governance to the benefit of the common citizen of our country. May your path be blessed.