The Free Press Journal

Govt begins process for appointing 44 HC judges after collegium prod

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The government is learnt to have initiated the process for appointing 44 high court judges after initially having returned their names to the Supreme Court collegium for reconsider­ation on two occasions. While 29 candidates are from the Allahabad High Court, two are from Karnataka, seven from Calcutta and six from the Madras high courts, highly-placed sources said on Sunday.

On April 10, the collegium – a body of five senior-most judges of the apex court – had for a second time reaffirmed its decision recommendi­ng the candidates for appointmen­t as HC judges.

The decision to reiterate the recommenda­tion for the second time was taken by the collegium, now headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar.

As per an establishe­d practice, the government usually appoints a person as a judge once the collegium reiterates its recommenda­tion.

But in the recent past, the Modi government had expressed its disapprova­l of the collegium’s recommenda­tions by returning them more than once.

Last week, a total of 17 judges were appointed to the Bombay and the Jammu and Kashmir high courts.

While 14 judges were appointed to the Bombay High Court, three were appointed to the Jammu and Kashmir High Court. The approved strength of the 24 high courts is 1,079 judges, but they are functionin­g with a truncated strength of 629 – a shortage of 450 judges. The government is unlikely to increase the approved strength of high court judges but focus on filling vacancies.

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