Kochi/New Delhi: The Lakshadweep administration, which has been facing widespread public protests on the islands over some of its policies, has mooted a proposal to shift its legal jurisdiction from the Kerala High Court to the Karnataka High Court, officials said.
However, late on Sunday night Lakshadweep district collector S Askar Ali said that there was no such move.
Earlier, there was no response either from Ali or from Advisor (chief Secretary) A Anbarasu to emails queries sent to them on June 17 (Thursday) on the move of shifting the jurisdiction.
"There is no proposal of Lakshadweep administration to shift its legal jurisdiction from the Kerala High Court to Karnataka High Court. The news of shifting the jurisdiction of high from Kerala to Karnataka is baseless and is devoid of truth," Ali said in a WhatsApp message.
The proposal was initiated by the administration in the backdrop of several litigations being moved before the Kerala High Court against the decisions taken by the islands' new administrator Praful Khoda Patel.
These decisions included revising standard operating procedures for COVID-appropriate behaviour, the introduction of the "Goonda Act" and demolishing hutments of fishermen for the widening of roads.
Patel, who is the administrator of Daman and Diu, was given the additional charge of the Union Territory of Lakshadweep in the first week of December last year when the former administrator Dineshwar Sharma died after a brief illness.
This year, as many as 23 applications, including 11 writ petitions, have been filed against the administrator of Lakshadweep and also against the alleged high-handedness of either the police or the local government of the islands.
However, for reasons best known to the island's administration, which is under the spotlight over its handling of these issues, it has made a proposal for shifting its legal jurisdiction from the high court of Kerala to Karnataka.
The jurisdiction of a high court can be shifted only through an act of Parliament, according to the law.
"Parliament may by law constitute a high court for a Union Territory or declare any court in any such territory to be a high court for all or any of the purposes of this Constitution," according to Article 241 of the Constitution.
Section 4 of the same article mentions that "nothing in this article derogates from the power of Parliament to extend or exclude the jurisdiction of a high court for a state to, or from, any Union Territory or part thereof".
Talking to reporters over phone, Lok Sabha member Mohammed Faizal P P said, "This was his (Patel) first attempt to shift the judicial jurisdiction from Kerala to Karnataka."