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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, July 29, 2001 |
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Vypeen tragedy victims get justice at last
By Our Staff Reporter
KOCHI, JULY 28. For the hapless surviving victims and the next of
kin of those killed in the 1982 Vypeen liquor tragedy, the recent
Kerala High court directive for paying compensation of Rs. 1 lakh
each has not come a day too soon.
In fact, their legal battle for getting compensation had been a
long and protracted one. But more than the relief, what makes the
judgment significant is that it fixes the responsibility on the
State Government for the tragedy. Besides, it is all the more
relevant, especially in the context of a clutch of hooch
tragedies that have struck the State of late.
The tragedy had claimed a toll of 71 lives and many drinkers
lost their eyesight. The tipplers had their drink (arrack spiked
with methyl alcohol) from the licenced shops. The victims of the
tragedy, which occurred on the Onam day of 1982 in the Vypeen
Island off Kochi, approached the High Court in 1993 following
their vain attempts to secure compensation through the civil
courts under private law.
In fact, the civil court had ordered compensation but the decree
could not be executed against the Abkari contractors as they had
been declared insolvent by then. Their efforts to get
compensation from the Government through the civil court had also
fallen through as the deadline for filing damage suits against
the Government officials prescribed under section 80 of the civil
procedure code was over. Though the abkari contractors were
convicted and awarded life imprisonment by the Supreme court, the
next of kin of those killed did not remain content with the apex
court verdict.
The Division bench of the High Court has awarded compensation on
the ground that the tragedy occurred because the State Government
and its excise officials utterly failed to discharge their
official duties properly. The Supreme Court has laid down that
under public law (meaning under the writ jurisdiction of the
court) `the wrong doer' can be penalised and can fix the
liability for public wrongs on the State Government which has
failed in its duty to protect the fundamental rights of the
citizen. The apex court had also observed that when it comes to
violation of fundamental rights or enforcement of public duties,
"the remedy would still be available under the public law
notwithstanding the fact that a civil suit could be filed for
damages under private law". In fact, the apex court had awarded
compensation through its verdicts to many victims on these
grounds. In this context, the High Court was of the opinion that
the State Government could be made liable when a fundamental
right of a person is violated.
The legal issue in the case was that whether the excise
officials had exercised their duties in accordance with the
statutory provision. The petitioners stance was that the
licencees (contractors) could not have resorted to adulteration
of arrack if the officers had complied with the statutory
provisions which safeguard against adulteration of liquor. The
High Court held the view that there was lack of vigil,
supervision and proper exercise of statutory duties by the
officers. The findings of the Justice Janakiamma Commission which
went into the liquor tragedy is that there was "grave failure" on
the part of the officers of the excise department. Since the
State Government had taken upon itself the task of monitoring the
trade in arrack, it is "its duty to see that the public is
offered arrack of the right quality", the High Court pointed out.
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