DR. AMBEDKAR: THE PRINCIPAL ACHITECT
OF THE CONSTITUTION OF INDIA
PART I
From
Dr. Ambedkar's entry into the Constituent Assembly to
the presentation of the Draft of
the Indian Constitution to the Constituent Assembly
______________________________________________________________
Contents
Draft Constitution as Published in the Gazette of India
DRAFT
CONSTITUTION AS PUBLISHED IN THE GAZETTE OF INDIA
The
Gazette of India
EXTRAORDINARY
NEW
DELHI, THURSDAY, FEBRUAY 26, 1948
CONSTITUENT
ASSEMBLY of INDIA.
New
Delhi, the 26th February, 1948.
No.
CA/99/Cons./47.The Draft Constitution of India, as settled by the
Drafting Committee of the Constituent Assembly, together with 'a
letter from the Chairman of the Committee to the President of the Constituent Assembly, is
hereby published for general information. The Draft will be taken into consideration at
the next session of the Constituent Assembly:
New
Delhi, 21st February, 1948.
To
The
Hon'ble The PRESIDENT of the
Constituent
Assembly of India,
New
Delhi.
Dear
Sir,
Introductory.On behalf of the Drafting Committee appointed by the resolution of the Constituent Assembly of August 29, 1947, I submit herewith the Draft of the new Constitution of India as settled by the Committee.
Although I have been authorised to sign the Draft on behalf of the members of the Committee, I should make it clear that not all the members were present at all the meetings of the Committee. But at every meeting at which any decision was taken the necessary quorum was present and the decisions were either unanimous or by a majority of those present.
In
preparing the Draft the Drafting Committee was of course
expected to follow the decisions taken by the Constituent Assembly or by the various
Committees appointed by the Constituent Assembly. This the
Drafting Committee has endeavoured to do as far as possible.
There were however some matters in respect of which the Drafting Committee felt it
necessary to suggest certain changes. All such changes have been indicated in the Draft by
underlining or side-lining the relevant portions. Care has
also been taken by the Drafting Committee to insert a footnote explaining the reasons for
every such change. I however think that, having regard to the importance of the matter, I
should draw your attention and the attention of the Constituent Assembly to the most important of these changes.
2.
Preamble. The Objectives
Resolution adopted by the Constituent Assembly in January, 1947, declares that India is to
be a Sovereign Independent Republic. The Drafting Committee
has adopted the phrase Sovereign Democratic Republic, because independence is usually
implied in the word "Sovereign ", so that there is hardly anything to be gained by adding the
word "Independent ".
The question of the relationship between this Democratic
Republic and the British Commonwealth of Nations remains to
be decided subsequently.
The
Committee has added a clause about fraternity in the preamble, although it does not occur
in the Objectives Resolution. The Committee felt that the need for fraternal concord and
goodwill in India was never greater than now and that this particular aim of the new
Constitution should be emphasised by special mention in the
preamble.
In
other respects the Committee has tried to embody in the preamble the spirit and, as far as
possible, the language of the Objectives Resolution.
3.
Description of India.In article 1 of the
Draft, India has been described as a Union of States. For
uniformity the Committee has thought it desirable to describe the Units of the Union in the new Constitution as States, whether
they are known at present as Governors' Provinces, or Chief
Commissioners' Provinces or Indian States. Some difference between the Units there will undoubtedly remain even
in the new Constitution; and in order to mark this difference, the Committee has divided
the States into three classes: those enumerated in Part I of the First Schedule, those
enumerated in Part II, and those enumerated in Part III. These correspond respectively to
the existing Governors'
Provinces, Chief Commissioners' Provinces and Indian
States.
It
will be noticed that the Committee has used the term Union
instead of Federation. Nothing much turns on the name, but the Committee has preferred to
follow the language of the preamble to the British North America Act, 1867, and considered
that there are advantages in describing India as
a Union although its Constitution may be federal in structure.
Articles
5 & 6
4.
Citizenship.The Committee has given
anxious and prolonged consideration to the question of citizenship of the Union. The
Committee has thought it necessary that, in order to be a citizen
of the Union at its inception, a person must have some kind of territorial connection with
the Union whether by birth, or descent, or domicile. The Committee doubts whether it will
be wise to admit as citizens those who, without any such connection with the territory of
India, may be prepared to swear allegiance to the Union; for if other States were to copy
such a provision, we might have within the Union a large number of persons who, though
born and permanently resident therein, would owe allegiance to a foreign State. The Committee has, however, kept in view the
requirements of the large number of displaced persons who have had to migrate to India
within recent months, and has provided for them a specially easy mode of acquiring
domicile and, thereby citizenship. What they have to do (assuming that they or either of
their parents or any of their grandparents were born in India or Pakistan) is
(a) to declare before a District Magistrate in India that they desire to acquire a domicile in India, and
(b) to reside in India for at least a month before the
declaration.
Articles
7 to 27
5. Fundamental Rights.-The Committee has attempted to make these rights and
the limitations to which they must necessarily be subject as definite as possible, since
the courts may have to pronounce upon them.
Article
59
6. Powers of the President of the Union.The Committee has considered it desirable to provide that the President should have power to suspend, remit or commute death sentences passed in an Indian State, as in other Units, without prejudice to the powers of the Ruler.
Article
278
It
will be remembered that the new Constitution empowers the Governor, in certain
circumstances, to issue a proclamation suspending certain
provisions of the Constitution; he can do so only for a period of two weeks and is
required to report the matter to the President.
The
Committee has provided that upon receipt of the report the President may either revoke the
proclamation or issue a fresh proclamation of his own, the effect of which will be to put
the Central Executive in the place of the State Executive and the Central Legislature in
the place of the State Legislature. In fact, the State concerned will become a centrally
administered area for the duration of the proclamation. This replaces the "Section 93
regime" under the Act
of 1935.
Article
60
7.
Executive Power in respect of Concurrent List subjects.Under the present
Constitution, executive authority in respect of a Concurrent List subject vests in the
Province subject in certain matters to the power of the Centre to give directions as to
how the executive authority shall be exercised, vide Parts I & II of the Concurrent
Legislative List in the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935. In the
Draft Constitution the Committee has departed slightly from this plan and has provided
that the executive power shall vest in the Province (now called the State) "save as expressly provided in this Constitution or by
any law made by Parliament." The effect of this saving clause is that it will be open to the
Union Parliament under the new Constitution to confer executive power on Union authorities, or, if necessary, to
empower Union authorities to give directions as to how executive power shall be exercised
by State authorities. In mating
this provision the Committee has kept in view the principle that executive authority should for the most part be co-extensive with
legislative power.
8.
Composition of the Council of States. According to a decision taken by the
Constituent Assembly, the Council of States was to contain not more than 25 members (out
of a Total not exceeding 250) to be elected from panels or constituencies on a functional
basis. The panel system having hitherto proved unsatisfactory in the country from which it
was copied (Ireland), the Committee has thought it best to
provide for 15 members to be nominated by the President for their special knowledge or practical experience in
Literature, Art, Science, etc. The Committee considers that no special representation for
labour or commerce and industry among these nominations is
necessary, in view of the fact
that they are certain to be adequately represented in the elected element of the Union
Parliament owing to adult suffrage.
Article
63 and 151
9.
Duration of Union Parliament and of State Legislatures.The
Committee considers that under the parliamentary system,
particularly at the beginning of a new Constitution on the basis of adult suffrage, a longer term than four years is desirable. New
ministers require some time to acquaint themselves with the details of administration, and
their last year office is usually taken up in preparing for the next general election.
With a four-year term they will not have enough time for any kind
of planned administration.
Article
107 and 200
10.
Supreme Court and High Courts.Following
the practice prevailing in the United Kingdom and the United States of America, the Committee has proposed that in certain circumstances retired judges may be invited to serve in particular cases both in the
Supreme Court and in the
High Courts.
Article
131
11.
Mode of selection of Governors.Some members of the
Committee feel that the co-existence of a Governor elected
by the people and a Chief Minister responsible to the Legislature might lead to friction.
The Committee has therefore suggested an alternative mode of appointing Governors:
the Legislature should elect a panel of four persons (who need not be residents of the
State) and the President of the Union should appoint one of the four as Governor.
Article138
12.
Deputy Governors.The Committee has not thought it necessary to make any provision
for Deputy Governors, because a Deputy Governor will have no function to perform so tong
as the Governor is there. At the Centre, the position is different , because the
Vice-President is also the ex-office Chairman of the Council of States; but in most of the
States there will be no Upper House and it will not be possible to give the Deputy
Governor functions similar to those of the Vice-President. There is a provision in the
Draft enabling the Legislature of the State (or the President) to make necessary
arrangements for the discharge of the functions of the Governor in any unforeseen
contingency.
Articles
212 to 214
13.
Centrally administered areas.In accordance with a resolution of the Constituent
Assembly, you, as the President, appointed a Committee of
seven members for the purpose of recommending constitutional changes in the centrally
administered areas namely, Delhi, Ajmer-Merwara, Coorg, Panth Piptoda and
the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The Committee submitted
its report on October 21, 1948. The Committee's
recommendations were briefly these:
(1)
Each of the provinces of Delhi, Ajmer-Merwara and Coorg
should Lieutenant-Governor appointed President of India.
(2)
Each of these provinces should normally be administered by a Council of ministers
responsible to the Legislature.
(3)
Each of these provinces should have an elected Legislature.
As
regards Panth Piptoda the
Committee recommended that it should be added to Ajmer-Merwara and as regards the Andaman and Nicobar Islands the Committee, recommended that they should continue to be administered by
the Government of India as at present,
with such adjustments as might be deemed necessary: in other words, these Islands were to continue as a Chief Commissioner's province.
The member representing Ajmer-Merwara
and the member representing Coorg on this Committee
appended a note to the Committee's report, in which they
said that the special problems arising out of the smallness, geographical position and scantiness of resources of these areas might at no distant future necessitate the joining
of each of these areas to a contiguous unit. They therefore urged that there should be a
specific provision in the Constitution to make this
possible after ascertaining the wishes of the people concerned.
So
far as Delhi is concerned, it seems to the Committee that as the capital of India it can hardly be placed
under a Total administration. In the United States, Congress
exercises exclusive legislative power in respect of the seat of the Government; so too in
Australia. The Drafting Committee has, therefore, come to
the conclusion that a more comprehensive plan than that recommended by the ad hoc Committees is desirable. Accordingly, the Drafting Gametes has proposed that
these central areas may be administered by the Government of India either through a Chief Commissioner or a Lieutenant-Governor
or through the Governor or the Ruler of a neighbouring State. What is to be done in the
case of a particular area is left to the President to prescribe by order; he will, of
course, in this, as in other matters, act on the advice of responsible ministers. He may,
if so advised, have a Lieutenant-Governor in Delhi; he may, again, if so advised,
administer Coorg either through the Governor of Madras or through
the Ruler of Mysore after ascertaining the wishes of the people of Coorg. He may also by
order create a local Legislature or a Council of advisers
with such constitution, powers and functions, in each case, as may be specified in the
order. This seems to the Drafting Committee to be a flexible plan, which can be adjusted to the diverse requirements of the areas concerned.
The
Committee has also provided that Indian States (such as
those of the Orissa group) which have ceded full and
exclusive authority, jurisdiction
and powers to the Central Government may be administered
exactly as if they were Centrally Administered Areas, i.e., through a Chief Commissioner, or Lieutenant-Governor,
or through the Governor or the Ruler of a neighbouring
State, according to the requirements of each case.
14.
Distribution of Legislative Powers.For the most part, the Drafting Committee
has made no change in the Legislative Lists as recommended by the Union Powers Committee and adopted by the Constituent Assembly, but I would draw
attention to three matters in respect of which the Drafting Committee has made changes:
(a)
The Committee has provided in effect that when a subject,
which is normally in the State List, assumes national importance, then the Union
Parliament may legislate upon it. To prevent any unwarranted encroachment upon State
powers, it has been provided in the Draft that this can be done only if the Council of
States, which may be said to represent the States as Units, passes a resolution to that effect by a two-thirds majority.
(b)
The Committee has considered it desirable to put into the Concurrent List the whole
subject of succession, instead of only succession to property other than agricultural
land. Similarly, the Committee has
put into the Concurrent List all the matters in respect of which parties are now governed
by their personal law. This will facilitate the enactment of a uniform law for India in
these matters.
(c)
While putting land acquisition for the purposes of the Union into the Union List and land acquisition for the purposes of a State
into the State List, the Committee has provided that the principles on which compensation
for acquisition is to be determined shall in all cases be in the Concurrent List, in order
that there may be some uniformity in this matter.
In
addition, in view of the present abnormal circumstances which require Central control over
essential supplies, the Committee has provided that for a term of five years from the
commencement of the Constitution, trade and commerce in, and the production, supply and
distribution of, certain essential commodities as also the relief and rehabilitation of
displaced persons shall be on the same footing as Concurrent List subjects. In adopting this course, the Committee has followed the
provisions of the India (Central Government and
Legislature) Act, 1946.
Articles
247 to 269
15.
Financial provisions.Broadly speaking, the Drafting Committee has
incorporated in the Draft the recommendations of the Expert Finance Committee, except
those relating to the distribution of revenues between the Centre and the States. In view
of the unstable conditions which at present prevail in this field, the Drafting Committee
has thought it best to retain the status quo in the matter of distribution of revenues for
a. period of five years, at the end of which a Finance Commission may review the
situation.
Article281
to 283
16.
Services.The Committee
has refrained from inserting in the Constitution any
detailed provisions relating to the Services; the Committee considers that they should be
regulated by Acts of the appropriate Legislature rather
than by constitutional provisions, as the Committee feels
that the future Legislatures in this country, as in other countries, may be trusted to
deal fairly with the Services.
Articles
289 to 291
17.
Elections, Franchise, etc.The Committee has not thought it necessary to
incorporate in the Constitution electoral details including the delimitation of
constituencies. These have been left to be provided by auxiliary legislation.
Article
304
18.
Amendment of the Constitution.The Committee has inserted a provision giving a
limited constituent power to the State Legislatures in respect of certain defined matters.
Articles 292,294 and 305
19. Safeguards for
Minorities.The Draft embodies the decisions of the Constituent Assembly and of
the Advisory Committee in respect of the reservation of
seats in the Legislatures and of posts in the public services. Although these provisions
do not extend to the Indian States, nevertheless, in the larger interests of India, the
Indian States should adopt similar provisions for the minorities therein. The Drafting
Committee has specially asked me to draw your attention to the importance of this matter.
First
Schedule
20.
Linguistic
Provinces.1
would invite special attention to Part I of the First Schedule and the footnote thereto.
If Andhra or any other linguistic region is to be mentioned
in this Schedule before the Constitution is finally adopted, steps will have to be taken
immediately to make them into separate Governors' Provinces
under section 290 of the Government of India Act, 1935,
before the Draft Constitution is finally passed. of course, the new Constitution itself
contains provisions for the creation of new States, but this will be after the new
Constitution comes into operation.
Fifth
and Sixth Schedules
21.
Scheduled Tribes, Scheduled Areas and Tribal Areas.The Committee has embodied
in the Schedules to the Constitution the recommendations of the Sub-Committees on these
subjects.
22.
A separate note recorded by Shri Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar on
certain points (not involving any question of principle) is appended to the Draft at his
request.
23.
I cannot transmit to you this Draft Constitution without placing on record the Committee's gratitude for the assistance the Committee has received in
this difficult task from Sir B.
N. Ban, the Constitutional
Adviser, Shri S. N. Mukeriee, Joint Secretary and Draftsman, and the staff of the
Constituent Assembly Secretariats
Yours
truly,
Preamble |
WE,
THE PEOPLE of INDIA,
having solemnly resolved to constitute India into a SOVEREIGN
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC [f1]
and to secure to all its citizens: |
5 |
|
JUSTICE,
social, economic and political; |
|
|
LIBERTY
of
thought, expression, belief, faith and worship; |
|
|
EQUALITY
of status and of opportunity; and to promote among them all |
10 |
|
FRATERNITY
assuring the dignity of the individual and the unity of the Nation; |
|
|
IN OUR CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY thisof(day of May, 1948 A. D.), do HEREBY ADOPT, ENACT
AND GIVE TO OURSELVES THIS CONSTITUTION. |
15 |
PART 1
The Union and its Territory and
Jurisdiction
Name and
territory of the Union |
[f2]1
(1) India shall be a Union of States (2) The States shall mean the States for the time
being specified in Parts I, II and III
of the First Schedule. (3) The territory of India shall comprise (a)
the territories of the States; (b)
the territories for the time being specified in Part IV of the First Schedule; and (c)
such other territories as may be acquired. |
5 10 |
Admission
and establishment of new States Formation
of new States and alteration of areas, boundaries or names of existing States |
2.
Parliament may, from time to time, by law admit into the Union,
or establish, new
States on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit. 3.
Parliament may by law a)
form
a new State by separation of territory from a State or by uniting two or more States or
parts of States; b)
increase
the area of any State; c)
diminish
the area of any State; d)
alter
the boundaries of any State; e)
alter
the name of any State: Provided
that no Bill for the purpose shall be introduced in either House of Parliament except by the Government of India and
unless (a)
either (i)
a representation in that behalf has been made to the
President by a majority of the representatives of the
territory in the Legislature of the State from which the territory is to be separated or
excluded; or (ii)
a resolution in that behalf has been passed. By the Legislature of any State whose
boundaries or name will be affected by the proposal to be contained in the Bill; and (b)
where the proposal contained in the Bill affects
the boundaries or name of any State, other than a State for the time being specified in
Part III of the First Schedule, [f3]the
views of the Legislature of the State both
with respect to the proposal to introduce the Bill and with respect to the provisions
thereof have been ascertained by the President; and where such proposal affects the
boundaries or name of any State for the time being specified in Part III of the First
Schedule, the previous consent of the State to the proposal has been obtained. |
15 20 25 30 5 10 15 |
Law
made under articles 2 and 3 to provide for the amendment of the First Schedule and
incidental and consequential matters |
4.
(1) Any law referred to in article 2 or
article 3 of this Constitution shall contain such provisions for the amendment of the
First Schedule as may be necessary to give effect to
the provisions of the law and may also contain such incidental and consequential provisions as
Parliament may deem necessary. (2) No
such law as aforesaid shall be deemed
to be an amendment of this Constitution for the purposes of article 304. |
20 25 |
PART II
Citizenship
Citizenship
at the date of commencement of the Constitution |
5.
At the date of commencement of this Constitution (a) every
person who or either of whose parents or any
of whose grand-parents was born in the territory of India
as defined in this Constitution and who has not made his
permanent abode in any foreign State after the first day of
April, 1947; and (b) every
person who or either of whose parents or any of whose grand-parents was born in India as
defined in the Government of India Act, 1935 (as originally
enacted), or in Burma, Ceylon or Malaya, and who has
his domicile in the territory of India as defined in this Constitution, shall be a citizen of India, provided that he has not acquired the citizenship of any foreign State before the date of commencement of this Constitution. Explanation.
For the purposes of clause (b) of this article, a person shall be deemed to have his
domicile in the territory of India (i) if
he would have had his domicile in such territory under Part II of the Indian Succession
Act, 1925, had the provisions of that Part been applicable to him, or [f4]
(ii) if he has, before the date of commencement of this
Constitution, deposited in the office of the District
Magistrate a declaration in writing of his desire to acquire such domicile and has resided
in the territory of India for at least one month before the date of the declaration. |
5 10 15 20 25 30 |
Parliament
to regulate the right of citizenship by law. |
6.
Parliament may, by law, make further provision regarding the acquisition & termination of
citizenship and all other matters relating thereto. |
|
PART
III
Fundamental
Rights
GENERAL
Definition |
7. In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires, "the State" includes the Government and Parliament of India and the Government and the Legislature of each of the States and all Total or other authorities within the territory of India. |
5 |
Savings |
8.
(1)
All laws in force immediately before the commencement of this Constitution in the
territory of India, in so far as they are inconsistent with the provisions of this Part.
shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void. (2)
The State shall not make any law which takes away or abridges the rights conferred by this
Part and any law made in contravention of this clause shall, to the extent of the
contravention, be void: [f5] Provided that nothing in this clause shall prevent
the State from making any law for the removal of any
inequality, disparity, disadvantage or discrimination
arising out of any existing law. (3)
In this article, the expression "law" includes any Ordinance, order, bylaw, rule, regulation,
notification, custom or usage having the force of law in the territory of India or any
part thereof. |
10 15 20 25 |
Rights of Equality
Prohibition
of discrimination on grounds of religion, race caste or sex |
9.
(1) The State shall not discriminate against any citizen on grounds only of religion,
race, caste, sex or any of them. In
particular, no citizen shall, on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex or any of
them, be subject to any disability, liability, restriction
or condition with regard to (a)
access to shops, public restaurants, hotels and places of public entertainment, or (b)
the use of wells, tanks, roads and places of 5 public
resort maintained wholly or partly out of the revenues of the State or dedicated to the
use of the general public. (2)
Nothing in this article shall prevent the State from making any special provision for
women and 10 children. |
30 5 10 |
Equality of
opportunity in matters of public employment. |
10.
(1) There shall be equality of opportunity for all citizens in matters of employment under the State. (2)
No citizen shall, on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, descent, place of birth
or any of them, be ineligible for any office under the
State. (3)
Nothing in this article shall prevent the State from making,
any provision for reservation of appointments or posts in favour of any [f6]
backward class of citizens who, in the opinion of the State, are
not adequately represented in the services under the State. (4)
Nothing in this article shall affect the operation of any law which provides that the
incumbent of an office in connection with the affairs of any religious or denominational
institution or any member of the governing body thereof shall be a person professing a
particular religion or belonging to a particular denomination. |
15 20 25 |
Abolition
of untouchability |
11.
"Untouchability"
is abolished and its practice in any form is forbidden. The enforcement of any disability
arising out of "Untouchability" shall be an
offence punishable in accordance with law. |
30 |
Abolition
of titles |
12.
(1) No title shall be conferred by the State. (2)
No citizen of India shall accept any title from any foreign State. (3) No person holding any office of profit or trust under the State shall, without the consent of the President, accept any present, emolument, title or office of any kind from or under any foreign State. |
35 40 |
Protection
of certain rights regarding freedom of speech etc. |
13. (1) Subject to the other provisions of this article, all citizens shall have the right (a)
to
freedom of speech and expression;
(b)
to
assemble peaceably and without arms; (c)
to
form associations or unions; (d)
to
move freely throughout the territory of India; (e)
to reside and settle in any part of the territory of India; (f)
to acquire, hold and dispose
of property; and (g) to practise any profession, or to
carry on any occupation, trade or business. (2) Nothing in sub-clause (a) of clause (1) of this article shall affect the operation of any existing law, or prevent the State from making any law, relating to libel, slander, defamation, sedition or any other matter which offends against decency or morality or undermines the authority or foundation of the State. (3)
Nothing in sub-clause (b) of the said clause shall affect the operation of any existing
law, or prevent the State from making any law, imposing in
the interests of public order restrictions on the exercise of the right conferred by the
said sub-clause. (4)
Nothing in sub-clause (c) of the said clause shall affect the operation of any existing
law, or prevent the State from making any law, imposing, in the interests of the general
public, restrictions on the exercise of the right conferred by the said sub-clause. (5)
Nothing in sub-clauses (d), (e) and (f) of the said clause shall affect the operation of
any existing law, or prevent the State from making any law, imposing restrictions on the
exercise of any of the rights conferred by the said sub-clauses either in the interests of
the general public or [f7] for the protection of the interests of any
aboriginal tribe. (6)
Nothing in sub-clause (g) of the said clause shall affect
the operation of any existing law, or prevent the State from making any law, imposing in the
interests of public order, morality or health, restrictions on the exercise of the
right conferred by the said
sub-clause and in particular prescribing, or empowering any authority to prescribe, the
professional or technical qualifications necessary for practising any profession or
carrying on any occupation,
trade or business. |
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 5 |
Protection
in respect of conviction of offence. |
14.
(1)
No
person shall be convicted of any offence except for violation of a law in force at the
time of the commission of the act charged as an offence, nor be subjected to a penalty
greater than that which might have been inflicted under the law at the time of the
commission of the offence. (2)
No
person shall be punished for the same offence more than once. (3)
No
person accused of any offence shall be compelled to be a witness against himself. |
10 15 |
Protection
of life and personal liberty and equality before law. |
[f8]
15. No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law, nor shall any person be denied equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India. |
20 |
Freedom of
trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of India. |
[f9]
16. Subject
to the provisions of article 244 of this Constitution and of any 0law made by Parliament,
trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of India shall be free. |
25 |
Prohibition
of traffic in human beings and enforced labour |
17.(1) Traffic in human beings and begar and other similar forms of forced labour are prohibited and any contravention of this provision shall be an offence punishable in accordance with law.(2)
Nothing in this article shall prevent the State from imposing compulsory service for
public purposes. In imposing such service the State shall not make any discrimination on
the ground of race, religion, caste or class. |
5 |
Prohibition
of employment of children in factories |
18.
No child below the age of fourteen years shall be employed to
work in any factory or mine or engaged in any other hazardous employment.
|
10 |
Freedom of
conscience and free profession practice and propagation of religion. |
19.
(1)
Subject to public order, morality and health and to the other provisions of this Part, all
persons are equally entitled to freedom of conscience and the right freely to profess,
practise and propagate religion. Explanation. The
wearing and carrying of kirpans shall be deemed to be included in the profession of the Sikh religion. (2)
Nothing in this article shall affect the operation of any
existing law or preclude
the State from making any law (a) regulating
or restricting any economic, financial, political or other secular activity which may be
associated with religious practice; (b) for
social welfare and reform or for throwing open Hindu religions
institutions of a public character to any class or section
of Hindus. |
15 20 25 30 |
Freedom to
manage religious affairs and to own, acquire and administer properties for religious or
charitable purposes. |
20.
Every
religious denomination or any section thereof shall have the right a)
to
establish and maintain institutions for religious and
charitable purposes; b)
to
manage its own affairs in matters of religion; c) to
own and acquire movable and immovable property; and d)
to
administer such property in accordance with law. |
35 40 |
Freedom as
to payment of taxes for promotion and maintenance of any particular religion or religious
denomination. |
21.
No
person may be compelled to pay any taxes, the proceeds of which are specifically appropriated in payment of expenses for
the promotion or maintenance of any particular religion or religious denomination. |
5 |
Freedom as
to attendance at religious instruction or religious worship in certain educational
institutions. |
[f10]22.
(1)
No religious instruction shall be provided by the State in
any educational institution wholly maintained out of State funds: Provided
that nothing in this clause shall apply to an educational institution which is
administered by the State but has been established under any endowment or trust which
requires that religious instruction shall be imparted in such institution. (2)
No person attending any educational institution recognised by the State or receiving aid
out of State funds shall be required to take part in any religious instruction that may be
imparted in such institution or to attend any religious worship
that may be conducted in such institution or in any premises attached thereto unless such
person, or it such person is a minor, his guardian has given his consent thereto. (3)
Nothing in this article shall prevent any community or denomination from providing religious instruction for pupils of that
community or denomination in an educational institution outside its working hours. |
10 15 20 25 |
[f1]This
follows the decision taken by the Constituent Assembly. The question of the relationship
between this Democratic Republic and the British Commonwealth of nations remains to be
decided subsequently.
[f2]The Committee considers
that, following the language of the preamble to the British North America Act, 1867, it
would not be inappropriate to describe India as a Union although its Constitution may be
federal in structure.
[f3]The
Committee is of opinion that in the case of any State other than a State specified in Part
III of the First Schedule, the previous consent of the State is not necessary and it would
be enough if the views of the Legislature of the State were obtained by the President.
[f4]The
Committee is of opinion that auxiliary action whether by legislation or otherwise may have
to be taken before the commencement of this Constitution for the receipt of declarations,
keeping of registers of such declarations and other incidental matters for the purpose of
clause (ii) of the Explanation.
[f5]The
proviso has been added in order to enable the State to make laws removing any existing
discrimination. Such laws will necessarily be discriminatory in a sense, because they will
operate only against those who hitherto enjoyed an undue advantage. It is obvious that
laws of this character should not be prohibited.
[f6]The
Committee is of opinion that before the words " class of citizens " the word
" backward " should be inserted.
[f7]The
Committee is of opinion that no protection to any minority .group is necessary in this
article.
[f8]The
Committee is of opinion that the word " liberty " should be qualified by the
insertion of the word " persona' " before it, for otherwise it might be
construed very widely so as to include even the freedoms already dealt with in article 13.
The
Committee has also substituted the expression " except according to procedure
established by law " for the words " without due process of law " as the
former is more specific (c.f. Art. XXXI of the Japanese Constitution, 1946). The
corresponding provision in the Irish Constitution runs: " No citizen shall be
deprived of his personal liberty have in accordance with law".
The
Committee is also of opinion that the words " or the equal protection of the laws
" should be inserted after the words " equality before the law " as in
section I of Article XIV of the U.S.A. Constitution (1865).
[f9]The
Committee has omitted the words "by and between the citizens" which occurred
after the words "trade, commerce and intercourse" in the provision as adopted by
the Constituent Assembly. the qualifying words might necessitate elaborate inquiries at
State frontiers as to the nationality of the consignor and consignee.
[f10]This
article follows the recommendation of the ad hoc Committee.