Jay Mala


Jay Mala is an Indian journalist, politician, advocate and social activist. She is a contributing editor for the National Herald, a newspaper founded by the first Prime Minister of India. She was co-founder of the Jammu and Kashmir National Panthers Party, prior to which she was President of the Indian Student Congress. Jay Mala is a senior advocate of the Supreme Court of India, who in a 1985 landmark case sued the State of Jammu and Kashmir changing tort law in India.
She was born to a Goud Saraswat Brahmin family.

Career

1979 Student Protest Arrest at India Gate

Jay Mala as the President of Indian Student Congress in 1979 led thousands of university students in protest against the Janata Party government at India Gate, New Delhi. Then minister of external affairs and future prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee attempted to address the angry crowd but was pelted with stones. While bleeding from the head he was protected by Jay Mala, who led him to escape into the neighbouring Parliament building. In the aftermath of the protests Vajpayee personally secured the release of Jay Mala from Parliament Street Police Station.

Jay Mala vs. Home Secretary, Government of Jammu and Kashmir

In 1982 she won a case against the Government of Jammu and Kashmir in the Supreme Court. Jay Mala, acting as a legal aid advocate, secured the release of Riaz Ahmed, proving he was still a minor when he was falsely imprisoned in Jammu and Kashmir. Chief justice P. N. Bhagwati quashed the detention stating the prisoner was a school boy protesting for student rights and not as the police had falsely accused him of being an adult threatening grievous bodily harm armed with a knife.
The case set precedent in India for determining the age of a minor detainee. The judges established that a two years margin of error be applied in judicial proceedings to radiological and orthopaedic test results used to determine age in favor of the accused. The case has been continuously quoted for three decades to secure the release of minors across India, and influenced legislation of the Juvenile Justice Act, 2000.

1983 Jammu and Kashmir General Elections

She co-founded the Panthers Party in 1982, that contested all seats in the 1983 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly elections. Jay Mala stood in the Udhampur constituency as the only female candidate against sixteen other men. She came third with 3,768 votes.
She polled the second most votes out of all women candidates in the general election. Only seven females had contested out of a total 512 candidates.

Bhim Singh, MLA vs State of J&K

In 1984 her husband Bhim Singh, an elected opposition member, was illegally arrested and hidden by the police while en route from Jammu for a debate at the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly in Srinagar scheduled for 11 September, where his vote may have been crucial. Jay Mala filed a case against the Government of Jammu and Kashmir, including then Chief Minister Ghulam Mohammad Shah as a respondent in order to find her husband and set him free.
After Bhim Singh's release she was his advocate in suing the government for compensation. In a 1985 landmark judgement O. Chinnappa Reddy awarded her husband 50,000 rupees. The order of the judgment as the first case for monetary compensation for false detainment, along with its high profile nature made it a quoted case in future litigations across India impacting law of tort.
In the case judge Reddy also ruled on the politicized nature of her husband's false imprisonment, stating that the two police officers who acted with "mischievous or malicious intent" were mere subordinates and that he did "not have the slightest doubt that the responsibility lies elsewhere and with the higher echelons of the Government of Jammu and Kashmir."

1987 Jammu and Kashmir General Elections

In the 1987 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly elections she was a candidate from the Jammu East constituency. She came fourth out of 19 candidates with 634 votes.
There were just 13 females out of a total 528 candidates in the general election.

2019 Citizenship Amendment Act protests correspondent

Mala Jay wrote for the National Herald, strongly in support of protestors during the uprisings across India and against the Citizenship Amendment Act. She wrote in favor of university students championing their progressive secular values, while reporting and berating incidences of police brutality, such as the use of tear gas inside the library of Jamia Millia Islamia University, in contravention to United Nations norms. She highly criticized the government's handling of the Citizenship Amendment Act protests, and gross atrocities committed under the NRC, where thousands of allegedly stateless persons were being imprisoned in cramped detention centres in India, under inhumane conditions. Some who had died in detention, later had their bodies sent to their families in India.
Her article on 26 January 2020, went viral with over 100,000 views in 24 hours, reporting a resolution proposed by 154 MEPs in the European Union Parliament condemning the Citizenship Amendment Act.

Personal life

She is married to Bhim Singh, leader of the Panthers Party. Her son Ankit Love is the leader of the One Love Party of Great Britain. She named him Love, with hope he would bring peace to the Kashmir conflict.

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