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Dont interfere, says CJI to Parliament, govt

A day after Parliament approved scrapping of collegium system for appointment of judges in higher courts, CJI RM Lodha said Parliament and executive should not interfere in the domain of judiciary.

Updated on: Aug 15, 2014 05:32 PM IST
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A day after Parliament approved scrapping of collegium system for appointment of judges in higher courts, Chief Justice of India RM Lodha said Parliament and executive should not interfere in the domain of judiciary.

"I am sure that people in judiciary, people in executive and people in Parliament are mature enough to have mutual respect for each other and ensure that each of them is permitted to work in their sphere unhindered by any extraneous influence," Justice Lodha said on Friday after unfurling the Tricolour on the Supreme Court premises.

Read:RS approves judges' appointment bill, over to states

He said our Constitution makers made it sure that all organs of the state operate in their respective field without encroaching upon the other's domain.

Notwithstanding reservations of judiciary, Parliament had cleared two bills providing for a new mechanism for appointment of judges to higher judiciary by scrapping the over-two-decade old collegium system that had come under attack from political parties and others.

Apparently responding to criticism over inordinate delay in the justice delivery system, Justice Lodha noted that while judiciary is responsible for appointing less than 1,000 judges (of SCs and high courts) governments appoint 19,000 judges in lower courts.

Read:End of the collegium system, a most exclusive club?

"As head of judiciary my heart feels pain when I find criminal justice system has given tremendous suffering, pain, exploitation of human rights and deprivation of human liberty," he said, adding that majority of prisoners in jails are undertrials.

"It is curious and tragic paradox that prisons are housed more by undertrials than convicts," he said, while noting that in central prisons more than 50% inmates are undertrials and in case of district prisons, the figure is more than 72%.

Union law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, who was present at the function organised by the Supreme Court Bar Association, said sanctity and independence of judiciary will be held high.

"Our government's commitment to the sanctity and independence of judiciary is complete and we hold it very high," Prasad said.

 
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