The controversy around Justice S. Muralidhar’s role in a United Nations inquiry on Gaza is not a single argument about one retired judge. It is a collision among biography, disputed institutional history, legal philosophy and the credibility of an inquiry dealing with harmed children.
The supplied DharmaRenaissance analysis compares a laudatory profile by The News Minute with objections attributed to The Commune. Read together, those competing narratives offer a practical lesson: accurate episodes can still be arranged into a misleading portrait, while legitimate demands for scrutiny can become speculative allegations when political association is treated as proof of motive.
A biography can be accurate and still be selective

According to the DharmaRenaissance article, a July 2026 profile by The News Minute presented Muralidhar’s Indian judicial career as the natural foundation for his UN appointment. It highlighted the Naz Foundation decision on Section 377, convictions arising from the 1984 anti-Sikh violence and the Hashimpura massacre, litigation over judicial asset disclosure, welfare and housing matters, and urgent proceedings during the 2020 Delhi violence.
The same article says that this rights-centred image is supported by substantial parts of the public record. Citing the Delhi High Court’s official biography, it reports that Muralidhar worked with the Supreme Court Legal Services Committee, represented people affected by the Bhopal gas disaster and the Narmada dams, and served as counsel for the National Human Rights Commission and the Election Commission. It also reports that he joined the Delhi High Court in 2006, later served on the Punjab and Haryana High Court, became Chief Justice of the Orissa High Court and retired in 2023.
The framing problem therefore does not depend on showing that those achievements were invented. It arises from the bridge built between them. Selecting cases associated with civil liberties and disadvantaged groups creates a coherent public identity, but it does not by itself establish why every later appointment occurred, why an institution valued a candidate or whether the candidate would approach a new inquiry without preconceptions.
The source says The News Minute went beyond documented biography by characterising Muralidhar’s transfer as unceremonious, encouraging an inference that it followed his questioning of the Delhi Police, and treating the UN position as a kind of professional vindication. Those may be arguable interpretations, but a profile should label them as interpretations and show what evidence supports the implied causal chain.
The transfer dispute turns on chronology and limits of proof

The most revealing test concerns Muralidhar’s 2020 transfer from the Delhi High Court. The chronology assembled in the supplied article says the Supreme Court Collegium recommended the transfer to the Punjab and Haryana High Court on 12 February 2020. The Union government issued its notification on 26 February, the same date that a bench involving Muralidhar questioned the police response to inflammatory speeches and communal violence in Delhi. The article further reports that the Department of Justice later issued a corrigendum and that Muralidhar assumed office in Chandigarh on 6 March.
That sequence cuts against two confident partisan explanations. Because the Collegium recommendation preceded the hearing, the proposal cannot fairly be described as having been created overnight in response to what happened on 26 February. At the same time, the government’s implementation on the day of the hearing made public suspicion understandable. Suspicion generated by timing, however, is not conclusive evidence of retaliatory intent.
The DharmaRenaissance analysis says The News Minute’s presentation leaned toward a persecution narrative, while The Commune described the transfer as accountability. Neither conclusion is established by the published Collegium material as presented in the source: it reportedly supplies no disciplinary reason and no definitive public explanation for the timing of implementation.
The same evidentiary restraint applies to claims about a possible Supreme Court elevation. The source says there is no cited public Collegium resolution proving that Muralidhar was formally selected and then rejected because of his ideology. It likewise finds no public record establishing the opposite claim that the judiciary judged him ideologically unsuitable. An opaque appointments process may invite political narratives, but missing information cannot serve as affirmative proof for either narrative.
Procedure, philosophy and partisanship are different claims
A 2018 order involving Gautam Navlakha illustrates how easily a procedural decision can be converted into an allegation about political allegiance. The source reports that a Delhi High Court bench involving Muralidhar quashed a transit-remand order after finding that constitutional and statutory arrest requirements had not been satisfied. It also says a later Supreme Court record confirmed that Navlakha had challenged the transit remand through a habeas corpus petition.
As a general legal distinction, invalidating a remand does not amount to acquittal, exoneration or approval of an accused person’s politics. Transit remand concerns the legality of custody and movement before an accused is produced in the court with jurisdiction. A serious criticism of such an order would therefore need to address the governing law, the documents before the magistrate and the remedy selected by the bench. The identity or associations of the accused cannot replace that analysis.
This does not make Muralidhar’s broader views irrelevant. The supplied article reports that in 2025 he described state anti-conversion laws as anti-choice and argued that notice, disclosure and burden-shifting provisions could intrude upon privacy and freedom of conscience. It also notes the competing public-policy concern that fraud, coercion, inducement and organised pressure may affect vulnerable communities.
Those comments provide legitimate evidence of a constitutional philosophy and are open to criticism from dharmic, legal and policy perspectives. They do not automatically prove that a procedural ruling years earlier was politically motivated or that the judge could not assess evidence in an international inquiry. Three propositions must remain separate: a jurist holds contestable views; those views may influence legal interpretation; and the jurist is so prejudiced that his participation invalidates an investigation. Each proposition requires more evidence than the one before it.
A commission’s work cannot be reduced to its chair

The appointment date is one point on which the supplied source identifies a concrete error. It says The News Minute placed Muralidhar’s appointment in 2024, while the official UN announcement, as summarised by DharmaRenaissance, records the appointment of Muralidhar, Florence Mumba and Chris Sidoti on 27 November 2025, with Muralidhar serving as chair. A date error does not settle the merits of the Gaza inquiry, but it matters in an explanatory profile because it affects the chronology the audience is being asked to trust.
Attribution matters just as much. According to the source, describing Muralidhar as the driving force behind the report obscures its collective authorship, the contribution of investigative staff and the commission’s pre-existing institutional mandate. Conversely, critics cannot fairly assign every conclusion to the chair merely because his name is the most recognisable to an Indian audience.
A sound assessment would examine the commission’s mandate, evidentiary methods, attribution standards, treatment of contrary material and the reasoning connecting evidence to conclusions. A biographical profile cannot substitute for that work, and allegations about a chair’s ideology cannot by themselves rebut a collective report. The supplied material permits scrutiny of media framing and responsibility for authorship, but it is not enough to independently adjudicate every factual finding attributed to the inquiry.
The moral frame also has to remain consistent. The DharmaRenaissance article insists that Palestinian children harmed in Gaza and the West Bank, Israeli children killed or abducted on 7 October 2023, and families carrying lasting trauma must not become instruments in a dispute among publications or political camps. Emotional urgency is a reason to demand greater precision, not permission to relax evidentiary standards.
Key takeaways for reading polarised coverage

- Establish chronology before accepting a claim about motive; sequence can support questions without conclusively answering them.
- Separate a procedural safeguard for an accused person from a finding of innocence or endorsement of that person’s politics.
- Treat post-retirement speeches as evidence of legal philosophy, not automatic proof of disqualifying prejudice.
- Attribute a commission’s work institutionally unless evidence shows that one member personally controlled a disputed conclusion.
- Apply the same standards of evidence, attribution and moral concern to Palestinian and Israeli victims.
Future coverage will be more credible if profiles disclose their interpretive leaps, rebuttals distinguish documented conflicts from ideological suspicion, and discussion of the Gaza inquiry focuses on evidence rather than symbolic biographies. That approach would neither canonise Muralidhar nor prejudge him; it would make the actual work of the commission, and the people affected by it, the centre of scrutiny.

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