Business Standard

Covid exposed justice delivery comorbidit­ies

- SUDIPTO DEY & GEETIKA SRIVASTAVA New Delhi, 28 January

Despite ameliorati­ve steps, structural issues in the justice system proved to be the biggest challenge to justice delivery during the pandemic-induced lockdowns, finds the latest edition of India Justice Report, an initiative of Tata Trusts.

Using pre-covid data, the report highlights how the “comorbidit­ies” in the four pillars of justice delivery system, namely police, judiciary, prisons and legal aid, stalled access to justice in pandemic times. The report, in its second edition, ranks states and union territorie­s on their capacity to deliver justice, and assess their progress in capacity creation.

“The pandemic has highlighte­d the need for speedier incorporat­ion of technology into the justice system,” the report noted. However, there are gnawing gaps among states and UTS in their preparedne­ss to adopt technology. As of 2019, about 60 per cent of jails are equipped with video conferenci­ng facilities, the report said. Only 10 states and UTS — Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Chandigarh, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Delhi Goa, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Puducherry and Uttarakhan­d — have these facilities in all jails.

Only Punjab and Himachal Pradesh scored 90 per cent, followed closely by Chhattisga­rh (88 per cent), Maharashtr­a (88 per cent) and Andhra Pradesh (86 per cent), when it comes to offering citizen online portal services for filing complaints, obtaining copies of FIRS, among other things. Bihar was the only state without a portal. The report found that most users faced numerous problems of accessibil­ity to these services.

The report also said that only 17.4 per cent of court halls were equipped with video conferenci­ng facilities. Maharashtr­a continues to lead the table among the 18 large and mid-sized states (with population of over 10 million each), followed by Tamil Nadu (2019: 3rd position), Telangana (2019: 11th), Punjab (2019: 4th) and Kerala (2019: 2nd). Among the seven small states (population of less than 10 million each), Tripura topped (2019: 7th), followed by Sikkim (2019: 2nd) and Goa (2019: 3rd).

The report also highlighte­d the gender imbalance in the justice system with women comprising only 29 per cent of judges in India. The growing pendency in the justice delivery system was marked by the fact that two-thirds of the country’s prisoners are yet to be convicted. In the last 25 years, since 1995, only 15 million people availed of legal aid, the report added.

The pandemic highlighte­d the need for speedier introducti­on of technology into the justice system

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