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Fundamental Rights parts 1: Overview
Enshrined in: Part III, Articles 12–35 of the Constitution
Description: Called the Magna Carta of India; guarantees basic rights and freedoms to individuals.
Originally included Right to Property (Article 31), removed by 44th Amendment (1978) and now under Article 300-A.


Key Points:
Protected by Constitution: Unlike ordinary legal rights, Fundamental Rights are enforceable by courts.
Available to: Some rights to all persons (citizens, foreigners, legal entities), others only to citizens.
Not absolute: Parliament can amend via constitutional amendment; reasonable restrictions apply.
Justiciable: Individuals can approach Supreme Court (Art. 32) or High Courts (Art. 226).
Suspension: During National Emergency, except Articles 20 & 21.
Article 19 freedoms suspended only during external emergency, not internal rebellion.
Restrictions: Application can be limited for armed forces, paramilitary, police, intelligence, or under martial law (Art. 33).

Classification of Fundamental Rights

Available to Citizens & Others Available Only to Citizens
Equality before law (Art. 14) Right to equality of opportunity in public employment (Art. 16)
Prohibition of discrimination (Art. 15) Protection of six freedoms (Art. 19)
Protection in respect of conviction (Art. 20) Right to elementary education (Art. 21A)
Protection of personal life & liberty (Art. 21) Protection of language, script, culture of minorities (Art. 29–30)
Protection against arrest & detention (Art. 22) Right of minorities to establish & administer educational institutions (Art. 30)
Prohibition of human trafficking & forced labour (Art. 23) Freedom to practice any profession or occupation
Prohibition of child labour in factories (Art. 24) Freedom of religion & management of religious affairs (Art. 25–28)
Freedom of conscience & religion Freedom from taxes for promotion of religion & attending religious instruction


Right to Equality (Articles 14–18)
Article 14 – Equality Before Law:
Applies to all persons (citizens, foreigners, corporations).
Exceptions: President/Governor immunity (Art. 361), Parliament/State Legislature speech immunity (Arts. 105 & 194), foreign diplomats.
Article 15 – Prohibition of Discrimination:
No discrimination on religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth.
Exceptions: Special provisions for women, children, backward classes (reservations, education).
Article 16 – Equality of Opportunity:
Equality in public employment appointments.
Exceptions: Reservation for backward classes, religious/denominational institutions.
Article 17 – Abolition of Untouchability:
Untouchability is illegal; offences include preventing entry, denying services, insulting, or preaching untouchability.
Conviction leads to disqualification from Parliament or State Legislature.
Article 18 – Abolition of Titles:
No state-conferred titles (except military/academic distinctions).
Citizens cannot accept foreign titles without President’s consent.
Foreigners holding offices under India also restricted from accepting foreign titles without consent.

 

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