why is the Indian judiciary prorich
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Judiciary is one of the most powerful institutions in our country as it is a body responsible for deciding the collective destiny of over one billion people who are diverse in many respects, yet united under a democratic constitution.
However, during the six decades of its functioning it has received more brickbats than bouquets.
Shortage of judges is one of the formidable challenges which the judiciary is facing for a long time now. This problem appears to have gotten so dire that there aren’t easy policy prescriptions to fix it. The reforms required to fix the problem, range from modest (increasing working days or the length of court sittings) to more complex (increasing overall efficiency and transparency).The Ministry of Law and Justice,has in fact listed the reasons for pendency and overburdening of judiciary, few of them being the increasing number of state and central legislations, vacancies of judges, number of revisions/appeals, frequent adjournments, indiscriminate use of writ jurisdiction and lack of adequate arrangement to monitor, track and bunch cases for hearing.As per the calculation of an expert, in case no new case is filed at the court, then also it would take 324 years to decide all the piled up cases!To cover a backlog of over a million cases, pending in the High Courts and Subordinate courts, the Indian judicial system inducted 1,734 Fast Track Courts, via Eleventh Finance Commission. However, in spite of the introduction of Fast Track Courts there was no apparent speeding up of judicial setup. One of the reasons for this was staff crunch, which prevented the courts from functioning in a time-bound manner. Also, it led to excessiveburden on public prosecutors. There are instances when a prosecutor had two or more cases being listed at the same time but in different courts!Also, the gap between the dates of hearing extends to several years, thereby increasing the pendency of cases. Moreover, an increase in the reporting of certain crimes such as crime against women has led to a rise in the workload of the judiciary.That said, inadequate strength of the police force has also played its part in the piling up of cases before the courts. The Law Commission report said that speedy investigation by the police has not been achieved due to reasons ranging from corruption within the system to the apathetic attitude of the officers.
With all of this, the wheels of judiciary may have slowed down, but they are certainly not rusted.
However, during the six decades of its functioning it has received more brickbats than bouquets.
Shortage of judges is one of the formidable challenges which the judiciary is facing for a long time now. This problem appears to have gotten so dire that there aren’t easy policy prescriptions to fix it. The reforms required to fix the problem, range from modest (increasing working days or the length of court sittings) to more complex (increasing overall efficiency and transparency).The Ministry of Law and Justice,has in fact listed the reasons for pendency and overburdening of judiciary, few of them being the increasing number of state and central legislations, vacancies of judges, number of revisions/appeals, frequent adjournments, indiscriminate use of writ jurisdiction and lack of adequate arrangement to monitor, track and bunch cases for hearing.As per the calculation of an expert, in case no new case is filed at the court, then also it would take 324 years to decide all the piled up cases!To cover a backlog of over a million cases, pending in the High Courts and Subordinate courts, the Indian judicial system inducted 1,734 Fast Track Courts, via Eleventh Finance Commission. However, in spite of the introduction of Fast Track Courts there was no apparent speeding up of judicial setup. One of the reasons for this was staff crunch, which prevented the courts from functioning in a time-bound manner. Also, it led to excessiveburden on public prosecutors. There are instances when a prosecutor had two or more cases being listed at the same time but in different courts!Also, the gap between the dates of hearing extends to several years, thereby increasing the pendency of cases. Moreover, an increase in the reporting of certain crimes such as crime against women has led to a rise in the workload of the judiciary.That said, inadequate strength of the police force has also played its part in the piling up of cases before the courts. The Law Commission report said that speedy investigation by the police has not been achieved due to reasons ranging from corruption within the system to the apathetic attitude of the officers.
With all of this, the wheels of judiciary may have slowed down, but they are certainly not rusted.
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Judiciary is one of the most important bodies in our world, since it is the body responsible for determining the common fate of more than one billion citizens who are varied in many ways, but unified under a democratic constitution.
Explanation
- As Indian legal system follows British rules and all is arbitrary no right is everything depending on the person viewing the case through the book.
- But when it comes to selling goods, everyone needs to bring down the right amount of rich means to manipulate people and they get away quickly.
- Rights should be absolute, rules should be dictated by the book and little should be left to people's judgment.
- Second India, like the US, requires 2nd amendment. That would help eliminate nepotism and offer a means for minorities to protect rights there before it happens. Only god will do justice to you.
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What is judiciary? why is judiciary important
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