Don’t use the term ‘North Madras youth’ negatively, say Madras HC judges
The Hindu
The Madras High Court on Thursday (October 3, 2024) disapproved of the practice of branding ‘north Madras youth’ as being violent or different from the residents of other parts of Chennai. A Division Bench of Justices S.M. Subramaniam and V. Sivagnanam asked a lawyer not to use the term ‘north Madras youth’ in this context.
The Madras High Court on Thursday (October 3, 2024) disapproved of the practice of branding ‘north Madras youth’ as being violent or different from the residents of other parts of Chennai. A Division Bench of Justices S.M. Subramaniam and V. Sivagnanam asked a lawyer not to use the term ‘north Madras youth’ in this context.
When the judges commenced the sitting for the day, advocate S. Tamilarasan made a mention of the withdrawal of police security provided to senior counsel S.R. Singaravelan and his family when he had administered the Bar Council of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry (BCTNP) before 2019.
The advocate said the ‘north Madras youth’ had a craze for wearing black coats and robes and affixing lawyers’ stickers on their vehicles, and that they tried to obtain law degrees from dubious institutions in neighbouring States to attempt to enrol with the BCTNP.
Mr. Singaravelan, during his stint as a special committee member of the BCTNP, had rejected the applications of more than 1,000 ‘north Madras youth’ and had faced an alleged threat to his life, the advocate said, adding that he and his family were given police security as a result.
Stating that this security was withdrawn recently, he said Bahujan Samaj Party’s Tamil Nadu unit president K. Armstrong was murdered by an armed gang in July this year and that a special investigation team constituted for the probe had investigated nearly 200 ‘north Madras lawyers’ in connection with the case.
Perplexed by the connection drawn between the political leader’s murder and the police security sought for the senior counsel, Justice Subramaniam told the advocate: “We don’t see any connection between the murder and the senior counsel. Why are you unnecessarily dragging him into the murder case?”
The senior judge in the Bench also stated that Mr. Singaravelan had performed the duty expected of him as a member of the special committee which administered the BCTNP before the conduct of elections to the council, and that would not entail granting lifelong police protection at public cost.