Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

As cases pile up, govt depts fail to meet deadlines

- Umesh Raghuvansh­i uraghuvans­hi@hindustant­imes.com

LUCKNOW: The state government’s move to expedite disposal of pending cases by filing counter affidavits has apparently failed to deliver desired results as the department­s concerned have not been able to clear the backlog even as fresh cases continue to pile up. At a high-level meeting held here on May 7, the state government had decided to launch a campaign to clear the backlog of cases by June 30.

All the department­s concerned were asked to file counter affidavits. Counter affidavit is an affidavit filed by an officer of respective department to put the government’s stand in a case. It is an affidavit made in opposition to one already made by a petitioner.

As more cases piled up due to delay in filing of counter affidavits in some of the department­s even after the deadline, the state government has now asked them to take a serious note of the issue and clear the backlog by October 31. Advocate general Raghvendra Pratap Singh said, “We have asked the department­s to appoint a nodal officer for coordinati­on and ensure that counter affidavits are filed in cases at the earliest. This issue has not been taken seriously in the past few years. This also has financial implicatio­ns on the government. We are now trying to speed up the entire process.”

A scrutiny of the data available on the Court Cases Informatio­n System (COCIS) indicates that as on October 23, counter affidavits have to be filed in 20,808 cases. These include 13,605 cases in Lucknow and 7,203 cases in Allahabad. Five department­s which have the highest number of pending counter affidavits include revenue (5,551), home (3,437), basic education (1,444), urban developmen­t (1,084) and secondary education (1,059).

The state revenue department tops the department­s where the number of counter affidavits to be filed has gone up after the campaign to clear the backlog ended.

Other department­s adding the backlog after the deadline include home (613), urban developmen­t (828), energy (324) and social welfare department (126).

A senior officer said the number of pending counter affidavits had come down considerab­ly in some other department­s. Secondary education department tops this list where pendency has come down by 3,913.

Other department­s have been now asked to follow the example of secondary education department and begin clearing the backlog on a war footing.The department­s that have been able to bring down the number considerab­ly include basic education (1,343), higher education (420), medical and health (255), finance (419) and industrial developmen­t (411). According to PRS Legislativ­e Research, the total number of counter affidavits pending in the Allahabad high court was 9,25,084 in September 2016. Total number of pending cases in district and subordinat­e courts in the state was 60, 47,069 in September 2016.

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