Concept of Basic Structure of The Constitution: An Appraisal From The Perspective of Bangladesh And India
Abstract
The basic structure doctrine is the judge-made rule that some features of the Constitution of India
are beyond the limit of the powers of amendment of the Indian parliament. The doctrine was first
expressed in ‘Kesavananda Bharati v. The State of Kerala’ reflects judicial distress at the
perceived danger to the moderate constitutional order caused by the Indian National Congress, in
particular under Indira Gandhi. The basic structure doctrine is only applicable to the
constitutionality of amendments and not to ordinary Acts of Parliament, which must match to the
whole of the constitution and not just to its basic structure.
On April 24, 1973, the Supreme Court ruled in Kesavananda that even though the Twenty-fifth
Amendment of 1971 was suitable, the court still kept back for itself the judgment to reject any
constitutional amendments passed by Parliament by asserting that the amendments cannot
modify the constitution’s “basic structure”.
The case of Anwar Hussain.Vs. Bangladesh widely known as 8th Amendment case is a famous
judgment in the constitutional record of independence Bangladesh. This is the earliest judgment
whereby the Supreme Court of Bangladesh as salient down an amendment to the constitution
ready by the parliament. By two court order appeal the amended Art 100 & the notification of the
Chief Justice were confronted as mega vires. A division bench of the HCD discharged the appeal
instantly. Leave was established by the Appellate Division by a majority of 3 to 1 striking down
the amendment 8th The standard argument of the judgment is that, the constitution rests on some
fundamental main beliefs which are its structural supports which the parliament cannot amend by
its amending power for; if these supports are discharged or damaged then the entire
constitutional configuration will lose its validity.
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