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Topic : Exemption for NRIs returning to India
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Created by : Suvrajit Gangopadhyay, B.E. (Elex. & Comm.)  | 09 29 2009 10:24:50 +0000
Keywords : india life case litigation
Activity:  218 views;  last activity : 07 13 2010 22:58:14 +0000

Law minister Mr. Veerappa Moily is attempting the impossible - Reducing the life of litigation from an average 15 years at present to 1 year, and that too in just 3 years from now. For this the ministry has furnished the following measures :

1. Setting up of 5000 new courts across the country that will work in 3 shifts - morning, day & evening.

2. Identical cases to be clubbed together.

3. Trial court judges to get laptops.

4. New Gram Nyayalayas to be functional from 2nd October.

All said & done. But friends do you think this is possible ???? .............

 
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Top Argument
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Always we should encourage improvements and developments and we should not discourage the initiative taken by the Government. We should think positive and not negative. If the Law minister as promised some thing, it is his responsibilty to achieve or fullfill the promise within the promised time. If  you feel that the promise cannot be fullifilled 100% atleast I feel they can achive 50% which also will be good achievement rather than not doing anything.


By Ramakrishna Perumal, Electrical Specialist Engineer,  10 07 2009 15:40:32 +0000
 
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The deceleration of the Law minister seems to be really audacious but i don't think this has an immediate possibility. In our country we are too used to the idea of late justice. We just believe in the practice of "chalta hai". After all the people in the judiciary are among us. In India the average litigation life is 15 years. It definitely needs to be brought down. But it can't be drastically done so. Over 2.75 crore cases are still pending in the trial courts which have clogged the wheels of justice.

For better things to happen we have to change the basics. Our law model needs to be reviewed & restructured. In our law we have some outrageous provisions which were made during the British raj & now they are completely redundant but still they have maintained status quo. We need to modernize the complete judicial machinery. One more important thing is the mindset of the judges. The judges have to be made more accountable. There should be a time limit put on every judge to deliver his verdict. Also it takes an absurd amount of time to do the paperwork for filing a case. The papers pass through various babus to the all the self proclaimed important people & invaluable time lost in these obsolete & irrelevant procedures.

But still i think this can be done. All it needs is strong will power from our present Law minister Mr. Moily & the one's to come. But immidiate possibility of this plan still seems impossible. It should have been done rather in a phased manner.


By Suvrajit Gangopadhyay, B.E. (Elex. & Comm.)  09 29 2009 10:24:50 +0000
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yes i agree on


By Tirumal Mohan Gudagudi, product design and cam programming, swissnox  | 03 06 2010 07:25:11 +0000
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Of course this is possible. When so many new courts with 3 shifts with will be working with settling identical cases together, more and more cases will get resolved in less and less amount of time. By replacing record books with laptops to judges, more accurate and faster decisions will be made now....


By Anagha Thakur, Corporate Lawyer  | 10 08 2009 08:35:24 +0000
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I think it is posiible but rather than day and night shifts and laptops we need to look at the loopholes in the law and plug it to make the system better thereby law and justice can be processed without unnecessary delays arising by bails ,bad health,hospitalisation ,etc etc .

All the above escuses are taken for granted ,manipulated by politicians, police and lawyers to the disadvantage of the innocent.

Giving bail in India has no particular law i think,If it is a famous person like Sanjay dutt anything is poosible.Common man cannot get bail for simple crimes/unintentional criome .

So I feeel loop holes plugged id litigation solved

 


By Charles davison, Project Manager, Douglas OHI LLC  | 10 07 2009 19:14:29 +0000
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