New Delhi: The Delhi High Court on Monday sought responses of the Election Commission (EC) and the Centre on a plea by 11 Independent candidates challenging the rejection of their nominations for the upcoming Delhi Assembly polls.
A bench of Chief Justice D N Patel and Justice C Hari Shankar issued notices to the Centre and the EC seeking their stand on the candidates' plea, which also seeks setting aside of a single judge order dismissing their petition against the rejection of their nominations.
The division bench said it will hear the matter on February 6.
The returning officer (RO) had rejected their nominations on January 21 the last date for filing the same.
The plea challenging the rejection was dismissed by a single judge of the high court on January 28 by saying that only an election petition was maintainable after the poll process has started.
Read: HC dismisses plea against AAP candidate's nomination for Delhi polls
The petitioner candidates, in their plea filed through advocate Viplav Sharma, have contended that the single judge's order was passed erroneously and disregarding the facts and material placed on record" by them.
The plea has alleged that the single judge had wrongly denied restoration, protection and enforcement of their constitutional and legal rights to contest elections from the New Delhi seat.
As an interim relief, the petition has sought a stay of the single judge's order and also the January 24 list of validly nominated candidates.
They have also sought a direction to the Centre, EC and Chief Election Officer to forthwith inquire into the manner in which their nominations were rejected.
The 11 persons, in their plea before the single judge, had sought to contest the upcoming assembly elections from the New Delhi seat, whose nomination forms were allegedly not accepted by the returning officer despite them arriving at the election office within the stipulated time.
On January 28, the single judge had dismissed the plea saying it was not maintainable and that under the Representation of People Act, only an election petition was permissible and it would have to be filed after results were declared.
The petition, before the division bench, has contended that the petitioners had arrived at the election office at Jamnagar House here early in the morning on January 20 with their duly-filled forms and required documents.
Since there were several candidates already waiting at the office, the returning officer issued them tokens and based on their respective token numbers the forms were to be accepted and scrutinised.
However, due to paucity of time, all the people who were issued tokens could not be attended to, the plea has said, adding that the returning officer asked the petitioners to come the next day.
The returning officer also told them their tokens were valid for the next day and their turn would come before that of others, the petition has claimed.
When the petitioners reached the election office the next day, they found that instead of tokens, the names of the applicants were being recorded on a sheet, the petition has said, claiming that once Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal arrived there to file his nomination, he was directly taken inside to allegedly facilitate his filing.
Their plea has also claimed that due to the wrongful, illegal, arbitrary, unconstitutional and malafide actions/inactions of Respondent 5 (RO), the petitioners were illegally and unconstitutionally deprived of exercising their constitutional right of participating in the democratic process of government formation".
The petitioners have sought directions to the Centre, EC, CEO and returning officer to initiate measures which would help them to file their nomination forms for contesting election from the New Delhi seat against Kejriwal.
(PTI Report)
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