Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Nyay Aapke Dwar’: Delivering justice and bridging divide

- Press Trust Of India htraj@hindustant­imes.com

Doorstep legal camps in Rajasthan are not only helping in instant settlement of long- pending contentiou­s issues but also bridging the divide in many an estranged family.

Brothers Cheena and Ahmad Rahmat of Maseet village hardly spoke to each other for 19 years following a land dispute.

Now thanks to the state government’s ‘Nyay Aapke Dwar’, a camp was organised in Maseet where Cheena and Ahmad’s case reached a logical conclusion, thus facilitati­ng the brothers to bury the hatchet.

“They (the administra­tion) informed us that cases such as mine can be solved at the Nyay Aapke Dwar, and I decided to file a petition,” he says. A week later, the brothers were summoned on May 10 at the revenue department-run ‘lok adalat’.

The ‘adalat’ settled the case on the spot and the entire process took hardly an hour, he says.

Like in Alwar, on the same day, camps in seven panchayats in Churu district disposed of more than 300 cases.

“This is one of the most successful legal-aid system in the country. We try to finish these camps before the monsoon. Once, the rains arrive, farmers become busy and hearings are almost impossible to conduct,” says Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje.

“The legal camps handle cases related to the revenue department and these move from one revenue village to another. Most cases are those of property disputes, and we try to dispose of as many as possible in a day,” said additional district magistrate (Alwar) Rakesh Kumar.

Started in 2015, Nyay Aapke Dwar camps (justice at your doorstep) have settled more than 69 lakh cases, some more than four decades old, through 28,000 ‘lok adalats’.

Last year, a camp in Nagaur successful­ly divided a piece of land among 50 members of a family, ending a 50-year-old dispute.

“These camps are helping us not only solve cases, but also implement developmen­t projects by ending disputes such as constructi­on of village roads,” Raje says. She attributes the success of Nyay Aapke Dwar to revenue department officials, especially those at the district level.

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