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The Real Challenge Is to Address Old, Chronic Cases: CJI Thakur

Justice Thakur expressed optimism that the judicial fraternity will overcome the challenges.

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The real challenge before the judiciary is to address chronic cases which remain festering in courts, Chief Justice of India (CJI) TS Thakur said on Saturday, even as he stressed that disposing of smaller cases was like cleaning the house of the garbage littered around.

Addressing a gathering after inaugurating the Gujarat State Judicial Academy, Justice Thakur recalled that when he was the Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana, he held Lok Adalats throughout the two states and disposed of 14 lakh cases.

But then we thought that disposing of smaller cases is like holding a broom and cleaning the house of garbage lying around. The real challenge lies in addressing chronic cases which remain festering in the courts.
TS Thakur, Chief Justice of India
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The CJI said, in order to address the issue, he then asked judges in the two states to provide particulars of 200 oldest civil and criminal cases.

Once the details came in, we told them that the target now is to dispose of these oldest of cases, because to dispose ordinary, inconsequential cases is not enough. We should dispose old, chronic cases.
TS Thakur, Chief Justice of India

He added that to dispose them, judges were given additional weightage, by bringing them under the unit system.

“The result was that within a period of six months or so, by the time I left for Supreme Court, judicial officers had disposed of 5,500 of the oldest civil and criminal cases,” he said.

During his speech, Justice Thakur expressed optimism that with the judicial fraternity being conscious of the “ever-increasing number of cases,” the challenges will be overcome.

The CJI had made an emotional appeal for appointing more judges to resolve millions of pending cases across the country while addressing a joint conference of chief ministers and chief justices of high courts with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in attendance in April.

Thakur, who met Modi in Gandhinagar on Saturday morning, said:

(I) told the PM when I met him in the morning today for breakfast that coming to Gujarat gave me such peace that once you land here, you feel you have landed in a very very peaceful place.

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