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CJI DY Chandrachud for national judicial recruitment process

60-70% recruits women, yet only 6.7% dist court infra female-friendly: CJI
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CJI DY Chandrachud speaks at an event in New Delhi on Sunday. PTI
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Tribune News Service

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New Delhi, September 1

As 28 per cent of the total sanctioned strength of 25,511 posts of judges in district courts remains vacant, Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud on Sunday favoured a national-level recruitment process for streamlining the selection of judicial officers for all states and Union Territories.

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Addressing the two-day National Conference of District Judiciary here, the CJI said, “At the district level, vacancies in judicial personnel stand at 28 per cent and of non-judicial staff at 27 per cent. In order for the disposals to outweigh the institution of cases, the courts must work beyond the capacity of 71 per cent to 100 per cent. To fill the vacancies, the conference deliberated upon the criteria for selection of judges and standardising the recruitment calendars for all vacancies.”

Justice Chandrachud said, “The time has come now to think of national integration by recruiting members to the judicial services across the narrow walls of regionalism and state-centred selections.”

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Currently, judges of the Supreme Court and high courts are selected through the Collegium system created by the Supreme Court in 1993 and the government’s role is limited to checking the antecedents of those recommended for appointment as judges. The judges of subordinate courts are selected through competitive examinations conducted by state public service commissions under the supervision of respective high courts where the state governments have very limited role.

The Centre has repeatedly told Parliament that there’s no proposal to create an AIJS even as it maintained that such a service was important to strengthen the overall justice delivery system.

The Union Justice Secretary had in May 2017 written to the Supreme Court Secretary General suggesting a centralised examination to be conducted by a recruitment body such as the UPSC for selection of judges in subordinate courts. The letter has since been converted into a PIL which has remained pending before the top court.

The CJI highlighted the need to ensure that women working in the judiciary were made to feel welcomed and included. “We must change the fact that only 6.7 per cent of the court infrastructure at the district level is female-friendly. Is this acceptable when over 60-70 per cent of recruits are women?” the CJI wondered.

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