The Act, passed by Maharashtra legislature, makes government's sanction mandatory for investigation against public servants.
Rajasthan government today tabled a bill to replace its ordinance protecting serving and former judges, magistrates and public servants from prosecution without prior sanction.
"The law is in force in Maharashtra since August 2016. We had opposed it when it was tabled in the Assembly because it seeks to shield corrupt ministers and officers," NCP spokesperson Nawab Malik told reporters here.
However, responding to NCP's demand, government spokesperson Brijesh Singh said that section 161 of the Bombay Police Act and section 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code already granted protection to government servants for acts done in the discharge of official duty.
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"By passing this amendment, Maharashtra government has ensured that corrupt officials will not be able to hide behind procedural delays. In the Bombay Police Act and the CrPC, no period was specified for grant of sanction to investigate somebody. Such cases remained pending for years," the senior IPS officer told PTI.
The Code of Criminal Procedure (Maharashtra Amendment) Act, 2015 says that the "sanctioning authority shall take a decision within a period of ninety days from the date of the receipt of the proposal for sanction, and in case the authority fails to take the decision within the said period ...the sanction shall be deemed to have been accorded.