News Brief
The bench posted the plea filed by academician Apoorvanand Jha and others on 22 July. (Pic Via X)
The Supreme Court on Tuesday (15 July) asked the Uttar Pradesh government to respond to a plea challenging its order requiring all eateries along the 'Kanwar' yatra route to display QR codes revealing owners' names and identities, as per a PTI report.
A bench of Justices MM Sundresh and N Kotiswar Singh issued notice to the state and scheduled the hearing for 22 July on the petition filed by academician Apoorvanand Jha and others.
Last year, the Supreme Court had stayed similar orders in BJP-ruled Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh that required eateries along the kanwar routes to display details of their owners and staff.
Jha’s petition cited a press release issued by the Uttar Pradesh administration on 25 June and argued that “The new measures mandate the display of QR codes on all eateries along the Kanwar route, which reveal the names and identities of the owners, thereby achieving the same discriminatory profiling that was previously stayed by this court.”
The Kanwar yatra attracts large numbers of devotees who carry holy Ganga water to perform ‘jalabhishek’ on Shivlings during the Hindu month of Shravan. Many devotees avoid meat, and some even refrain from eating onions and garlic during this time.
The petitioners urged the court to strike down the QR code directive, calling it unconstitutional and discriminatory, and warned it would unfairly target specific communities running eateries along the yatra route.