Judiciary is neglected wing of state: Ganguly

Budgetary allocation much less than 1% : Justice Ganguly

PTI | February 8, 2012



Justice A K Ganguly, whose bench delivered Supreme Court's landmark 2G spectrum verdict, lamented that judiciary is a "neglected wing" of state and asserted Government cannot use "cash crunch" as an excuse.

"In our country, Judiciary, I am sorry to say, is neglected wing of the state out of the three wings. The importance of judiciary cannot be under-estimated. But think of the budgetary allocation of the judiciary. It is much less than one per cent," Justice Ganguly told PTI in an interview.

Expressing concern over non-implementation of promises made by various governments to improve judicial infrastructure, he said justice cannot be denied to the people, which is their fundamental right, "on the plea of cash crunch and some other excuses". Justice Ganguly retired last Thursday after delivering the 2G verdict.

"Promises are made for improving the structure of judiciary. They are mostly on paper. The right to access the court is constitutional guarantee. Our entire constitutional structure is based on rendering justice," he said, adding that Indian judges are most hardworking and work under tremendous pressure.

"The infrastructure is very inadequate. Judge-population ratio is the lowest in India even if you compare it with other developing countries. Among Asian democracies and if you even consider all the countries in the developed democracies. the India democracy can be considered as best in the world.

"The Indian Judge is the most hard working judge. He is under tremendous pressure. At the same time he has to deliver and he does deliver justice. He has miles to go to make to make Constitution alive better," he said.


Comments

 

Other News

Borrowing troubles: How small loans are quietly trapping youth

A silent crisis is playing out in the pocket of young India, not in stock markets or government treasuries, but in smartphones of college students and first-jobbers who clicked on the Apply Now button without reading the small print.  A decade ago, to take a loan, you had to do some paperwor

A 19th-century pilgrim’s progress

The Travels of a Sadhu in the Himalayas By Jaladhar Sen (Translated by Somdatta Mandal) Speaking Tiger Books, 259 pages, ₹499.00  

India faces critical shortage of skin donors amid rising burn cases

India reports nearly 70 lakh burn injury cases every year, resulting in approximately 1.4 lakh deaths annually. Experts estimate that up to 50% of these lives could be saved with adequate access to skin donations.   A significant concern is that around 70% of burn victims fall wi

Not just politics, let`s discuss policies too

Why public policy matters Most days, India`s loudest debates stop at the ballot box. We can name every major leader and recall every campaign slogan. Still, far fewer of us can explain why a widow`s pension is delayed or how a government school`s budget is actually approved. That

When algorithms decide and children die

The images have not left me, of dead and wounded children being carried in the arms of the medics and relatives to the ambulances and hospitals. On February 28, at the start of Operation Epic Fury, cruise missiles struck the Shajareh Tayyebeh school – officially named a girls’ school, in Minab,

The economics of representation: Why women in power matter

India’s democracy has grown in scale, but not quite in balance. Women today are active participants in elections, influencing outcomes in ways that were not as visible earlier. Yet their presence in legislative institutions continues to lag behind. The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam was meant to addres


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter