Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

‘Pick merit and not political loyalty in appointing lawyers’

- Jatin Gandhi letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE PANEL HAS ALSO SUGGESTED A CEILING ON THE NUMBER OF LAWYERS THAT A DEPARTMENT CAN HAVE

The Centre and states choose political affiliatio­ns over merit in appointing government counsels, a practice that has to be curbed to reduce judicial backlog, the law commission has said.

In a letter to the prime minister’s office, the panel has also redflagged excessive workforce and suggested a ceiling on number of lawyers a department can have.

“Don’t appoint 200 government counsels when you only need six, we have said,” a law commission member told HT earlier this week, adding certain states crowded their legal department­s with “acolytes of the ruling party who lack legal merit and cases drag on”.

Indian judicial system is painfully slow. Around 31 million cases are pending in the country’s various courts and the government is the litigant in 46% of these cases. Without bringing down cases involving the government, it is not possible to cut down pendency. Government­s often reward political loyalty when picking lawyers to represent it in various courts.

All department­s should be made to fix the number of counsels and follow the income tax department’s model of assessing their performanc­e every six months, the commission suggested. The recommenda­tions, which were submitted in the last week of June and will be the basis of much-awaited national litigation policy, also called for a nodal agency to save “litigation, time and process” in disputes involving government department­s.

A high-powered committee of secretarie­s under the cabinet secretary should coordinate between different department­s.

The judiciary and the government have been at loggerhead­s over the ever-growing mountain of pending cases. The judiciary blames poor infrastruc­ture and vacant posts of judges for the pendency, as the two sides slug it out over the appointmen­t procedure of senior judges, which the government says is opaque.

The litigation policy draft would soon be presented before the cabinet for approval. The policy has been in the works for seven years, with the Centre making the first push in June 2010 but the draft drawn up by law minister Veerappa Moily didn’t make much progress. In May this year, the PMO roped in the law commission to put together a draft that would be created from the legal perspectiv­e and not the bureaucrac­y’s, a minister said.

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