-The Times of India NEW DELHI: Stays on proceedings ordered by high courts and the Supreme Court delay trial by up to 6.5 years, according to a study by the law ministry. Significantly, the average life of a case is 10-15 years. In effect, a case remains in limbo for 50% of its life span because of stays granted by the higher Judiciary. The study, which covered the Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat...
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Judiciary intervenes when executive fails in its constitutional duties: CJI
-The Indian Express TS thakur said that the government should do their job instead of hurling accusations, and people turn to the courts only after they are let down by the executive. Chief Justice of India T S Thakur Monday said that the onus is on executive if it wants less judicial interference and that the Judiciary intervenes only when the executive fails in its constitutional duties. “Extent of judicial interference in governmental...
More »SC erred in disaster relief order? -Dhananjay Mahapatra
-The Times of India NEW DELHI: In its over-zealousness to protect the lives of citizens reeling under severe drought in several states, the Supreme Court has erred in directing the Centre to set up a National Disaster Mitigation Fund (NDMF) under a non-operational statutory provision, which had riled the government. Led by finance minister Arun Jaitley, the government had accused the Judiciary of wanton interference in the executive's exclusive domain of earmarking...
More »Govt rejects CJI's claim of need for 40K more judges -Amit Anand Choudhary
-The Times of India NEW DELHI: The Centre on Wednesday virtually rejected Chief Justice of India TS Thakur's claim that 40,000 more judges were needed to obliterate over three crore pending cases by saying that his estimates were not backed by any scientific research or data. Referring to 1987 Law Commission report suggesting increase in judges' strength, the CJI had on May 8 said the Judiciary needed an additional 40,000 Judges to...
More »Centre can’t shirk responsibility while dealing with drought: Supreme Court -Utkarsh Anand
-The Indian Express The bench also issued directives for updating the drought management manual - published in 2009 — after taking into account rainfall deficit, timely declaration of drought and other factors. New Delhi: RULING THAT “the buck will eventually stop with the Government of India”, the Supreme Court Wednesday directed the Centre to consider drought as a disaster and constitute a national response force along with a consolidated fund within...
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