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              |   | The importance of rights of the nation |  
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                    Seema Singh (Source: IANS) | 23 Aug, 2022
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                        | Top Stories |  |  |  
                    |  |  |  As we celebrate 75 years of Independence, it is a high time to 
introspect and contemplate about the gains and losses we made in past 
this much of years.
 
 
 We got Independence after a 
long struggle on August 15, 1947. On this day, a new Independent state 
came into existence. On January 26, 1950, the Constitution of India was 
implemented, which begins with the �Preamble'.
 
 The Preamble 
indicates the mission and vision of the Constitution. The Preamble 
begins with "We the People of India" followed by "Sovereignty, Justice, 
Liberty, Equality and Fraternity". All of these goals are the collective
 responsibility of every citizen of this nation.
 
 Here 
sovereignty and fraternity is related to the rights of the nation and 
rest with the rights of the citizens. Unfortunately, the concept of 
nation has not received appropriate attention within the existing 
constitutional scheme.
 
 In fact, in the entire Constitution, the 
term �nation' has hardly been mentioned at one or two places, only under
 the chapter of Fundamental Duties.
 
 Article 1 of the 
Constitution begins with - India i.e. Bharat shall be a union of States.
 For majority of the people, there is no difference between India and 
Bharat, but in reality there is a big difference. India is a political 
entity comprising territories and citizens but Bharat is one of the most
 ancient cultural civilizations.
 
 India is defined according to 
the modern theories of political science, but the meaning of Bahrat 
remained undiscussed in post-Independent India.
 
 Bharat is one of
 those rarest nations whose geography naturally defines its territory. 
According to Puranas, from the Himalayan range in north to the Indian 
Ocean in south, the entire region was the land of Bharat. Before 1857, 
the area of Bharat was somewhere around 1 crore sq km which is now 
hardly 33 lakh sq km.
 
 Bharat Mata means a living entity having 
all the rights of a natural person. Like any other person, Bharat Mata 
has the right to dignity, sovereignty and integrity and it is the 
responsibility of every Bhartiya to protect her rights even at the cost 
of their own life.
 
 Bharat Mata has some distinguished rights - 
like right to territorial sovereignty, ecological sovereignty, cultural 
sovereignty and spiritual sovereignty.
 
 Here the meaning of 
territorial sovereignty is any attempt to alter the territorial 
boundaries should be discouraged and defended by the people of this 
country with best of their ability. This right of motherland is non 
compromisable. Our land has been dived 24 times in the last 2500 years, 
which proves that we could not successfully defend the territorial 
sovereignty of this country.
 
 The idea of ecological sovereignty is deeply ingrained in Indian society in connivance with spiritual sovereignty.
 
 The
 Bhartiya culture is fundamentally eco-centric. Bhartiya darshan always 
believed in the deep alliance of human being with nature and considered 
itself as the trustee, and not the owner of the same. The philosophy of 
non-duality removes the difference among the different creation of 
supreme divine whether inanimate or animate.
 
 Through the 
spiritual richness of this nation, we kept our ecology balanced for 
thousands of years and also provided a safe ecosystem to all components 
of nature, including the five elements of universe or 'Panch 
Mahabhoots', i.e., Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth.
 
 Bhartiya 
culture does not believe in exploitation of nature but under the 
influence of globalisation we are compromising with the cultural and 
ecological sovereignty of this nation and leaving behind our richest 
cultural and spiritual heritage, which is the constant source of our 
existence in all odds.
 
 As we mark the 76th Indpendence Day, we 
need to analyse how much we are concerned about our nation's rights. 
There are several good reasons for celebrations.
 
 We are now the 
fifth largest economy of the world, there is a considerable hike in per 
capita income and we are among the most powerful nations in the world.
 
 But
 there is more to inspect, to think and to analyse. It is a reality that
 our total forest cover is now only 21.71 per cent though it should at 
least be 33 per cent of the total area.
 
 In coming years, we are 
going to be the most populated country leaving behind China, which is 
going to cause immense pressure on our natural resources.
 
 We are
 the third most polluted country in the world. We are under serious 
ecological threat. Around 10,000 species of plants and a few hundred 
animal species are under severe threat due to the violation of 
ecological sovereignty of the nation.
 
 Air pollution was responsible for 16.7 lakh deaths in India in 2019, or 17.8 per cent of all deaths in the country that year.
 
 According
 to a report by World Meteorological Organization (WMO), natural 
disasters, such as cyclones, floods and droughts, cost India around $87 
billion in 2020.
 
 Air pollution cost Indian businesses about $95 
billion � or Rs 7 lakh crore � every fiscal. There are around 76 active 
terrorist organisations operating in India.
 
 Our border areas are
 constantly receiving direct or indirect threats; divisive voices are 
rising from within the nation. These data reveals that we have heavily 
compromised with the cultural, ecological, spiritual and territorial 
sovereignty of our nation.
 
 All these data indicate that the 
threats faced by the nation is actually damaging each of us. All these 
threats are challenging not only our right to life but also to our 
cultural, ecological and territorial existence.
 
 Our Constitution
 and our courts are very much concerned about the protection of the 
rights of the citizens. Under Articles 32 and 226 on the violation of 
the fundamental rights, immediate relief can be claimed before  the 
Supreme Court or any high court. But what about the rights of the 
nation? They have not been properly recognised by us.
 
 In fact, 
in many cases of conflicts between the rights of the nation and the 
rights of the citizens, the latter's rights prevail.
 
 In a very 
recent observation, the Supreme Court suspended the sedition law. The 
right to freedom of speech and expression of the citizens is many times 
protected in violation of the restriction of Article 19(2) which is also
 a constitutional mandate.
 
 Even after 75 years of Independence 
'Rajdroha' is not recognised in the form of a separate offence, though 
it directly violates the right of the nation. Many a times courts are 
mixing rights of refugees and rights of intruders and illegal migrants 
and passing such orders which are adversely affecting the rights of the 
nation.
 
 Perhaps we don't have the realisation that without 
protecting the rights of the nation, rights of the citizens cannot be 
protected.
 
 In few recent judgments of high courts some ray of 
hope could be seen, as the courts gave recognition to the ecological 
right of the nation when they recognised the rights of rivers, birds and
 animals.
 
 In 2017, the Uttarakhand High Court (UHC) had ruled 
that rivers Ganga and Yamuna, the Gangotri and Yamunotri glaciers, as 
well as other related natural elements are 'legal persons' with all 
corresponding rights, duties and liabilities of a living person.
 
 And
 more recently, the Punjab and Haryana High Court declared the entire 
animal kingdom, including avian and aquatic, as legal entities having a 
distinct persona with corresponding rights, duties and liabilities of a 
living person. In both the judgments, the ecological and environmental 
sovereignty of the nation were indirectly recognised.
 
 All these 
discussions conclude that we are very indifferent with the importance of
 the rights of the nation. The importance can be understood from those 
who are stateless and known as illegal migrants or intruders. We still 
don't realise that we cannot exist without the existence of our nation.
 
 This
 is not the responsibility of the armed forces and the government only 
to protect the rights of the motherland. This should be our collective 
responsibility.
 
 It is high time for the government/s and judiciary to recognise the rights of the nation and to give them supreme priority.
 
 Governments
 should be responsible to citizens, but every citizen must also be 
responsible to the nation. We cannot survive as a powerful citizen 
unless the rights of the nation are protected. So let's take a pledge to
 save our nation, to save its values, its sovereignty and its culture. 
Let's take a pledge that we will not destroy what we have not created on
 our motherland... we will save this divine motherland at all cost 
raising above our petty interests.
 
 Let's rise together to 
protect the territorial, cultural, ecological and spiritual sovereignty 
of the nation to save our existence and to save the future of the coming
 generations.
 
 (Dr Seema Singh is Assistant Professor, Campus Law Centre, University of Delhi. The views expressed are personal)
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