Fast Summary:
- The Madras High Court directed the Regional Passport Officer (RPO) in Chennai to reissue NTK leader S. Seeman’s lost passport within four weeks.
- justice N. Anand Venkatesh quashed an earlier RPO order that denied reissuance and cited prior legal precedents allowing passport renewal despite pending criminal cases.
- The court clarified that permission from criminal courts is required only for international travel, not passport issuance or renewal.
- Seeman claimed he has faced “motivated criminal cases” since 2008 but was previously allowed passport-related approvals to meet Tamil diaspora abroad.
- His lost passport incident from September 2024 led to a police report and subsequent request for a new one in November 2024, which the RPO had denied on January 31, 2025.
Indian Opinion Analysis:
The Madras High Court decision reinforces judicial precedence separating administrative processes like passport issuance from legal accountability for individuals facing criminal charges. this ruling avoids penalizing individuals prematurely based on allegations alone while also maintaining safeguards requiring court permission for foreign travel if necessary. For India’s citizens and political leaders, this case symbolizes the judiciary’s role in protecting constitutional rights balanced against administrative oversight. However, authorities will need clear protocols to prevent misuse of such permissions while ensuring procedural fairness remains intact.
Read more