Online Business

Govt for filling up vacancies of judges in SC, HC

The government is reminding the Chief Justices of High Courts to initiate the process of filling up the vacancies of judges, Law Minister M Veerappa Moily said, pointing out that there are seven vacancies in the Supreme Court and 240 in High Courts. - If HC judges want to become heroes it is their wish: Moily - Roadmap for judicial reforms soon: Moily - Batla House encounter: HC rejects plea for judicial inquiry - HC issues notice to Centre on non-appointment of NHRC chairman - NEWSALERT: Delhi HC upholds airport dev fees - Trai view on capping of licences by Nov-end "Government has been periodically reminding the Chief Justices of the High Courts to initiate proposals for filling up of all vacant posts of Judges in the High Courts as also those which will be falling vacant during the next six months," he said in a letter to Congress MP Rajeev Shukla. The minister said there "are seven vacancies in the Supreme Court and 240 vacancies in the High Court to be filled up". Moily said filling up of the vacancies is a continuous process as it keeps arising due to various reasons such as retirements, resignations and elevation of judges. He said the government had taken various steps like filling up of the vacancy of judges, increasing the judges strength, grouping of cases involving common question of law, constitution of specialised benches and organising Lok Adalats at regular intervals to expedite disposal of cases. Shukla had raised the issue through a Special Mention in the Rajya Sabha on July 9.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Will it last?
While there are visible signs of a recovery in the real estate market, price hikes by developers and any increase in interest rates could halt this momentum.
Popular Articles

Sensex falls to lowest in 6 weeks
Down 387 points to 16,353 as banking stocks fall on hardening monetary policy.

CHESS #614
When reigning world champion Anatoly Karpov lost to Wolfgang Hartmann in Hanover in 1983, it created shock waves. The 27 year old Hartmann was a lowly 2290-rated player and no prodigy. By those standards, Anand’s last round defeat to Levon Aronyan at the Tal Memorial was mundane.