Tag: Court

  • MP: Court orders registration of FIR in Dalit youth suicide case

    MP: Court orders registration of FIR in Dalit youth suicide case

    [ad_1]

    Indore: A special court in Indore has ordered registration of a First Information Report in connection with the February 2022 suicide of a 21-year-old Dalit man due to alleged police torture.

    The family of the deceased had alleged that he was tortured by police as he was in love with a Brahmin girl and eloped with her.

    Police allegedly refused to probe the suicide, so the family moved a special court for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act cases, said the family’s lawyer Neeraj Kumar Soni.

    Special judge Manoj Kumar Tiwari earlier this month ordered the Scheduled Castes welfare police station here to register a case and submit a report after probe, Soni said.

    Badia, a B Com student, left home along with his Brahmin girlfriend on February 9, 2022, with the intention of getting married, as per the complaint.

    Police sub-inspector Vikas Sharma, posing as the girl’s uncle, visited his house on the same day and threatened the family members using casteist words, the complaint said.

    Sharma called Akash to Chandan Nagar police station on February 10, 2022, and beat him up inside an ambulance parked on the police station premises, it alleged.

    The police official allegedly warned him that if he married the woman, he would be implicated in rape and drug cases and spend his whole life in jail.

    Akash allegedly hanged himself at home on February 16, 2022.

    A note on his mobile phone accused Vikas Sharma and another official of the Chandan Nagar Police Station of being responsible for his death.

    Despite the family’s complaint, no suicide case was registered, the complaint alleged.

    [ad_2]
    #Court #orders #registration #FIR #Dalit #youth #suicide #case

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Kerala HC rejects Mohanlal’s plea against trial court order in illegal ivory case

    Kerala HC rejects Mohanlal’s plea against trial court order in illegal ivory case

    [ad_1]

    Kochi: The Kerala High Court on Wednesday dismissed actor Mohanlal’s plea against a trial court order rejecting the state government’s move to withdraw prosecution proceedings against him in a case related to illegal possession of ivory tusks.

    Justice A Badharudeen was of the view that an accused in a case “have no right to challenge an order refusing withdrawal of prosecution” since the said procedure is the prerogative of the prosecution.

    The court, however, also set aside the trial court order and directed it to consider afresh the state government’s plea to withdraw prosecution in the case.

    “…the prayer for withdrawal of prosecution of the present case sought for by the government requires reconsideration by the trial court,” the high court said.

    It directed the parties to appear before the trial court on March 3.

    “There shall be a direction to the trial court to hear and pass fresh orders as expeditiously as possible from the date of receipt of copy of this order, at any rate within a period of six months,” the high court said.

    The state government had sought withdrawal of the prosecution contending that it would be a futile exercise and wastage of the court’s time.

    The magisterial court, in its June 2022 order, indicated that it was not inclined to grant the prayer as the withdrawal petition was filed in a hasty manner without addressing the challenges raised before the High Court regarding legality of the ownership certificate issued to Mohanlal.

    The state government had on February 7, 2020 extended consent for withdrawal from prosecution in this case.

    The trial court, in its order, had noted that there was no gazette notification in this case and hence the alleged certificate of ownership of the tusks has no legal sanctity and was void ab initio.

    Four elephant tusks were seized from the actor’s house in a raid conducted by the Income Tax authorities in June 2012, following which a case was registered against him.

    The complainant had alleged that the top actor had used his clout to bury the case without any further investigation.

    [ad_2]
    #Kerala #rejects #Mohanlals #plea #trial #court #order #illegal #ivory #case

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • High Court Allows Minor Rape Victim To Terminate 19 Weeks Pregnancy

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: The High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh directed the authorities to proceed with the termination of a 18-20-week pregnancy of an alleged minor rape victim after having a fresh examination of the victim and after father of a minor gives “extra high risk consent.”

    The victim’s father had approached the court seeking termination of pregnancy of the minor. In the rape case, an FIR was registered at a police station in north Kashmir on February 14.

    According to report published by LiveLaw.in, Justice Javed Iqbal Wani on February 17 had directed a Medical Board of LD Hospital in Srinagar to ascertain as to whether the termination of pregnancy is advisable or not.

    Mohsin Qadiri, Sr. Additional Advocate General on Tuesday submitted a report addressed by the Head of Department, Gynaecology and Obstetrics, Government Medical College, Srinagar, to the Medical Superintendent, Government LD Hospital, Srinagar stating that the patient has a 19 weeks of pregnancy and runs a very high risk for MTP as it is a case of teenage pregnancy.

    The report further said that MTP could be undertaken subject to the “extra high risk consent given by guardians/parents.” In court, the father of the victim volunteered and agreed to extend the consent as solicited by the medical board.

    The court directed the authorities to proceed with the case of termination of pregnancy of the minor victim by the experts in the field after having a fresh examination of the victim.

    “In the event a final call is taken by the experts for termination of pregnancy of the minor victim, necessary measures shall also be taken in association with respondents 3 and 4 for the preservation of the DNA sample of the fetus. It is further directed that in case the process of termination of pregnancy is undertaken, the minor victim be provided all necessary medical facilities free of cost by the respondent 2,” LiveLaw.in quoted the court as having said.

    [ad_2]
    #High #Court #Minor #Rape #Victim #Terminate #Weeks #Pregnancy

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Battle for control of Wisconsin Supreme Court sees liberal and conservative advance to final round

    Battle for control of Wisconsin Supreme Court sees liberal and conservative advance to final round

    [ad_1]

    image

    “I can’t tell you how I’ll rule in any case, but throughout this race, I’ve been clear about what my values are,” Protasiewicz said during her victory speech, pointing to her support for abortion access, voting rights and public safety.

    The eventual winner will help decide major cases that are likely to come before the court. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and state Attorney General Josh Kaul sued to overturn a more than century-old state law banning most abortions, which could make its way to the state Supreme Court later this year. The court may also be poised to have a say on election laws, as it has in the past.

    The race — a down-ballot contest in an off-year — brought in millions of dollars. From the beginning of the year through the primary election, ad spending reached over $9 million on television, digital and radio, per AdImpact. The top spender was Fair Courts America, a super PAC linked to GOP megadonor Richard Uihlein, which has put in around $2.8 million in support of Kelly. Last year, the group said it intended to spend “millions of dollars” on Kelly’s candidacy.

    Not far behind Fair Courts America was Protasiewicz, who aired a robust ad blitz backed by a $2.3 million spend. She raised more than $725,000 from the beginning of the year through Feb. 6 — more than all of her opponents’ combined fundraising in that period. Her campaign said it raised more than $2 million since she entered the race in May, a record-breaking sum for a spring primary candidate in Wisconsin.

    A Better Wisconsin Together Political Fund — the same group that spent close to $4 million on the governor’s race in support of Evers last election — spent $2.2 million on advertisements hitting Dorow. Dorow spent over $600,000, and outside groups made up the rest of the spending.

    [ad_2]
    #Battle #control #Wisconsin #Supreme #Court #sees #liberal #conservative #advance #final
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Special NIA court sentences ISIS terrorist to seven years in jail in Rajasthan

    Special NIA court sentences ISIS terrorist to seven years in jail in Rajasthan

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: A special NIA court in Rajasthan has sentenced an ISIS-linked terrorist to seven years of rigorous imprisonment for conspiring to carry out terrorist acts in the country, an official said on Tuesday.

    The special judge of the NIA court Jaipur convicted Mohammed Sirajuddin alias “Siraj” in a case registered in 2016 under various sections of Indian Penal Code and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, a spokesperson of the federal agency said.

    The case pertains to the promotion of the ISIS ideology and Siraj influencing others over social media platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp and Telegram to become members of the proscribed terror group and to indulge in terrorist activities, the spokesperson said.

    Sirajuddin, who hails from Gulbarga area in Karnataka, was found inciting the youth to carry out acts of violence and terror.

    “He was living in Jaipur and was using online chats and messages advocating and spreading the ideology of the ISIS, also known as Islamic State, in various parts of the world,” the spokesperson said.

    The official said he also arranged and assisted in organising online discussions and meetings among active ISIS operatives to plan and execute acts of violence and terrorism in the country.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Special #NIA #court #sentences #ISIS #terrorist #years #jail #Rajasthan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • To what extent can court intervene, asks SC on plea for uniform laws

    To what extent can court intervene, asks SC on plea for uniform laws

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: The Supreme Court, hearing a batch of pleas, which included PILs seeking a direction to the Centre to make religion and gender-neutral uniform laws governing subjects like marriage, alimony, divorce, and inheritance, on Monday observed that the question is to what extent can the court intervene.

    A bench, headed by Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud observed: “The question is to what extent the court can intervene in these matters as the issues fall under the legislative domain.”

    Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, representing a petitioner, said he has a preliminary objection to the PILs filed by advocate Ashwini Upadhyay.

    On the other hand, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta submitted: “In principle… as I am concerned, there cannot be any objection to gender-neutral uniform laws applicable to all equally…”

    He added that it is for the apex court to examine what can be done on the judicial side.

    Sibal asked the bench, also comprising Justices P.S. Narasimha and J.B. Pardiwala, to see the prayers made in the petition before the court and added that he can understand if these issues were taken up individually. He stressed that it is for the government to decide if they are willing to make gender and religion-neutral uniform laws and the court should not issue even “a prima facie order” in the matter.

    Senior advocate Gopal Sankaranarayanan, representing Upadhyay, contested Sibal’s submissions and said there is an individual petition, where a Muslim woman said she wanted the personal laws governing her, to be gender neutral.

    At this, Sibal said: “These are for the government to decide… If the government wants to take it up, we have no problem.”

    After hearing arguments, the top court asked the lawyers to prepare a list of prayers made in the petitions and agreed to take them up after four weeks and decide whether it can hear the pleas.

    A total of 17 petitions have been filed, which include several PILs and some of the petitions sought a direction for enacting uniform religion and gender-neutral laws on a wide variety of issues.

    Upadhyay has filed five separate petitions seeking direction to the Central government to frame religion and gender-neutral uniform laws for divorce, adoption, guardianship, succession, inheritance, maintenance, marriage age, and alimony.

    [ad_2]
    #extent #court #intervene #asks #plea #uniform #laws

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • 4 reasons Big Tech is worried about the Supreme Court this week

    4 reasons Big Tech is worried about the Supreme Court this week

    [ad_1]

    The case, which goes to oral arguments before the court on Tuesday, specifically tests whether social media platforms’ use of algorithms to recommend content to users is protected under Section 230. The court’s ruling could reshape the entire online ecosystem, including social media, e-commerce and job portals — all of which use algorithms to promote content to users.

    Platforms say if the liability shield doesn’t protect their use of targeted algorithms to recommend and promote content, some companies would more aggressively remove users’ speech or bar the discussion of more controversial topics for fear of being sued.

    In recent years, as social media platforms have come under increasing fire for the harms caused by content they host, Section 230 has become a target for politicians on both the left and the right who see it as granting the industry special protections not enjoyed by traditional publishers. (Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have called for removing the shield. Biden has yet to back any specific proposals.) Its supporters argue it’s crucial to a free and open internet where citizens can exchange ideas without worrying they’ll get the entire system shut down.

    To date, Congress has largely failed to act outside of passing a 2019 carveout to the law related to sex trafficking. The disagreement stems from Democrats wanting platforms to remove content related to extremism and hate speech, and Republicans wanting more content — particularly conservative speech — to remain.

    Here are four things to watch going into Tuesday’s oral arguments:

    Can Clarence Thomas form a winning coalition?

    Thomas, a frequent critic of Section 230, has written two dissents urging his colleagues to take a case reviewing what he sees as the lower courts’ overly broad interpretation of the law in favor of tech companies.

    A key question Tuesday is whether Thomas can persuade four other justices to join him for a majority. Two potential allies could be Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch. They joined a dissent with Thomas last May in a separate tech industry case before the court, NetChoice v. Paxton, seeking to uphold a Texas law requiring social media platforms to host all users’ political viewpoints.

    “Alito and Gorsuch are his most likely allies in this case, and the question I think then is whether he can grab a couple others, and it’s not clear to me whether he can,” said Anupam Chander, a professor of law and technology at Georgetown Law.

    And the bipartisan nature of the pressure to change Section 230 protections has experts watching to see if that is reflected in any decision from the justices. “There’s a kind of strange bedfellows aspect to tech regulation currently with everyone mad at tech companies for the opposite problems — the left accusing it of allowing it too much speech, and the right accusing it of censoring too much speech,” Chander said.

    The importance of algorithms

    Among those most affected by any ruling against Google could be smaller internet companies and individual website users, like volunteer moderators for Reddit, legal scholars and lawmakers said.

    Large platforms such as YouTube could afford the liability risks of continuing to use algorithms to recommend content if the justices rule against Google. But some lawmakers fear that decision would be financially crippling for small businesses and startups.

    “If you harm the little guys and you harm moderation, you’re going to reduce innovation, competition and opportunities, and give the big guys — like Facebook and Google — even more of the online market,” said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), one of the original authors of Section 230.

    Without algorithms that rely on user preferences to push recommendations, websites would likely present content in reverse chronological order, said Jeff Kosseff, a cybersecurity law professor at the U.S. Naval Academy who wrote a book on the history of Section 230.

    “I don’t know if the American public is ready for not having personalized algorithms anymore,” Kosseff said. “How does TikTok operate without personalized algorithms? You just get any random video that’s ever been posted?”

    But some legal scholars said tech companies should be liable for their products and services that break the law, just like any other business.

    Mary McCord, the executive director of Georgetown Law’s Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection, doesn’t believe tech companies’ “sky is falling” hyperbole that internet platforms will shut down if they can’t use recommendation algorithms. “They’ve just had this free pass since their inception — not even having to worry about the kinds of risks that every other company has had to face,” said McCord, who filed an amicus brief in the case on behalf of former national security officials.

    McCord, who was an acting assistant attorney general for national security in the Obama administration, said that in 90 percent of terrorist incidents, social media factored significantly into the radicalization of individuals committing the attacks.

    Republican Party split

    In amicus briefs filed with the court, Republican lawmakers are split on how the justices should rule. That division may make it harder to predict how the conservative justices will land on the case as well — either siding with arguments that tech’s legal shield is too broad or that it’s necessary to protect free speech.

    Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) called for the court to narrow its reading of Section 230 to more strictly align it with the statute — saying lower courts too broadly interpreted the law in tech’s favor. Similarly, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), along with 16 other Republican members of Congress, argued that the court needs to narrow the scope, arguing it gives large tech too much power over which speech is allowed — or “censored” — on their sites.

    In contrast, former Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Rick Santorum’s amicus brief said narrowing the law’s interpretation would suppress speech, adding that Section 230 specifically allows companies to “filter,” “choose,” and “organize” content.

    The split in the GOP between traditionally business-friendly conservatives and a more populist anti-tech contingent creates a challenging tightrope. “Historically, conservatives have sought to reduce litigation risk for corporations,” Georgetown’s Chander said. “Section 230 very much does that.”

    But he added that, today, conservatives are taking “an anti-big business stance — and a new populism stance in doing so — that coincides with a kind of irritation with what they see as anti-conservative bias by technology companies.”

    Gonzalez ruling may influence upcoming tech cases

    How the Supreme Court rules in Gonzalez could affect its decision in a tech case scheduled for arguments the following day — Twitter v. Taamneh. That case asks whether Twitter, Google and Facebook can be held liable under the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act for allegedly aiding and abetting terrorists by sharing ISIS recruitment content.

    The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in an opinion consolidating the two cases that the plaintiffs’ Anti-Terrorism Act claims in Gonzalez were barred under Section 230. In Taamneh, it found the platforms could be held liable for aiding and abetting an act of international terrorism by permitting ISIS to post content on their sites.

    The Biden administration filed a brief recommending the Gonzalez case be sent back to the 9th Circuit, arguing that Section 230 does not immunize YouTube when its algorithm recommends ISIS content.

    Legal scholars said the justices will likely rule on the cases in tandem. Chander predicts the court will find that Section 230 doesn’t provide immunity for YouTube’s targeted algorithms in the Gonzalez case, but will rule in favor of Twitter, Google and Meta in the Taamneh case by finding they couldn’t be held liable for underlying claims they aided and abetted terrorist acts by hosting ISIS content.

    It could also tee up the justices for a potential ruling in two other cases the court likely punted to next term involving Republican laws from Texas and Florida that ban platforms from removing users’ viewpoints and deplatforming candidates. The companies said the laws violate their free speech rights.

    But Daphne Keller, a director at Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center, said a ruling in Gonzalez that finds Google’s recommendation algorithms aren’t protected under Section 230 may backfire if the court later upholds the Texas and Florida laws that ban platforms from removing content.

    “If Texas and Florida win their cases, then people can sue because platforms took their content down, even though the whole reason the platforms took the content down was to avoid the liability that Gonzalez created,” Keller said.

    “It’s so circular, and I’m not sure the court realizes that.”

    [ad_2]
    #reasons #Big #Tech #worried #Supreme #Court #week
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • The Activist Pastor Running to Remake the Wisconsin Supreme Court

    The Activist Pastor Running to Remake the Wisconsin Supreme Court

    [ad_1]

    “People in this space should feel: ‘I was treated with respect. I was treated like an adult. I was treated like a human being,’” he adds. “The main question we face is how to ensure they don’t go back out into the community and hurt more people.”

    This idea lies at the heart of an audacious campaign Mitchell launched months earlier for a pivotal seat as justice on the state’s highest court, an election that Mandela Barnes, the one-time Democratic senatorial candidate calls “one of the most consequential elections” in Wisconsin, if not the country. Up for grabs in this technically nonpartisan race is the ideological makeup of the court. That’s no small thing in a battleground state where the government is divided between Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and Republicans in the legislature. Supreme Court justices hold the balance of power — and conservatives have controlled the majority of the court for the last decade.

    The first round of voting, scheduled for Tuesday, will be followed by a run-off April 4. Whoever wins will tip the scale on far-reaching decisions about issues like abortion access, voting rights, redistricting — and even the role Wisconsin courts will play in the next presidential election. Mitchell’s candidacy places the judge up against three older — and better funded — white candidates in a state where 80 percent of the population is white and where party organizations and outside advocacy groups have spent millions in an attempt to sway the election. By the weekend before the first round of voting, $6 million had already been expended, much of it on TV attack ads.

    Mitchell doesn’t seem daunted by his long odds. “People have been writing me off all my life,” he says.

    That life so far has been studded with seemingly miraculous turns.

    By the time he reached his teens, Mitchell felt lost, invisible, mostly muted, intensely dour. He could not read properly; he trusted none of the adults closest to him; he felt gutted by the fact that he had failed to protect his younger sister from sexual predation by their stepfather. By the time he entered high school Mitchell no longer dreamed of going to college. “I was so angry in ninth grade. I was drinking Mad Dogs, skipping classes, hanging out,” he remembers. His highest ambition at the time was to play basketball or become a rap artist.

    But events intervened, altering his life trajectory.

    The first radical pivot in life happened shortly after he turned 15. One night when Mitchell was in his bedroom at home trying out new phrases for a rap song, he heard a voice calling: “Everett.” This voice wasn’t like any he’d heard before; it was clear, loud, out of the blue. There was nothing subtle in it, he emphasizes, perhaps noting my skeptical expression. He challenged the voice to “do something ridiculous, like light a fire inside of me,” and felt a burning sensation in his chest right then. “It was like an instantaneous passion. I’ve been on fire ever since. I could feel it. I feel it still,” he recalls.

    Mitchell started preaching the gospel right away, a transformation that arrived like a thunderclap for his younger sister, Shuntol Mitchell. He stopped running the streets. Never much of a talker before, her brother suddenly held forth at great length in pulpits across town. “Some people are just born with it. And he just had it,” Shuntol Mitchell recalls. She figured that his quick turn to preaching offered Everett a sense of purpose, not to mention relief from ongoing trouble at home.

    Their stepfather’s sexual abuse began when she was 5 and Everett was 6, she says. Her brother was the only one who had tried to protect her. “That’s why he’s the only man I trust,” she says. “The only one.”

    The second big pivot in their lives came thanks to one of his teachers. One morning at school Everett arrived feeling particularly morose. Taking note of his despondency, the teacher took him aside and pressed him to tell her what was wrong. She reported what Everett told her to Child Protective Services.

    Within a few days their stepfather was forced out of the house. The sudden change felt like a miracle. Finally, the siblings thought, an adult stepped in to protect them.

    A third pivot followed that transformative event. When he graduated high school, the only job Mitchell had on offer was as a bagger at the local grocery. But instead, Mitchell took a chance. He enrolled at Jarvis Christian College, an historically Black college in east Texas, without having to apply, thanks to the intervention of a guidance counselor who recommended him as a good student.

    How had he managed to graduate high school — let alone preach — without being able to read even passages from the Bible? He had the ability to recognize phrases and copy them out, he explains. “I was also verbal. I had a good memory. And I had become a great listener.” At Jarvis, though, his educational deficiencies caught up with him. Two professors, noticing his difficulties with his first assignments, interceded. Nearly every day after classes, from 5 o’clock until about 10 p.m., they tutored him, line by line and page by painful page until he was fluent.

    Three teachers, then, delivered Mitchell into the possibility of a new life. In conversations he often names all three women: Amy Love, Margaret Bell and Mrs. Daisy Wilson.

    Without their interventions, he notes, there would have been no high-flown career. No transfer to Morehouse College in Atlanta, where he studied mathematics and theology; no advanced study in divinity, theology and ethics at Princeton Theological Seminary; no law degree from the University of Wisconsin; no stint as manager of a re-entry program for people being released from prison, no role as director of community relations for the university, and no service as a prosecutor and judge in charge of juvenile justice in Dane County.

    The memory of their intercessions reminds him every day, Mitchell says, of the outsize influence a person in authority could play in saving a life — or in crushing a spirit. He sums up that essential lesson in two words: “To protect.” Their influence led him, from pastoring to study to “lots of therapy,” he adds, on to a legal career as a prosecutor and judge.

    That practice might be called trauma-informed jurisprudence. “I don’t talk about how many people I locked up,” he notes. “I talk about how many lives I worked to save.”

    That is the message he hopes to take into the chambers of Wisconsin’s Supreme Court.

    In his campaign announcement, Mitchell is shown sitting in his chambers, dressed in his judicial robe, with shelves of law books from floor to ceiling angled into a V behind him. “I’m a father, I’m a husband, I’m a judge, I’m a pastor, I’m a community leader,” he says. That fourth entry — community leader — still matters to him deeply. As he says those words a photo flashes on the screen of Mitchell protesting in the streets, dressed in his bright red pastoral gown at a march organized by religious leaders after the 2020 murder of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis.

    He began his current campaign in June of 2022 against three older and more experienced judges, one progressive and two conservatives. His hope: to use the race for what he considered a higher purpose, educating voters about the need for systemic judicial reform from bottom to top. After he was elected as a circuit court judge in 2016, for example, he allowed juvenile defendants to appear in his courtroom unshackled. Bailiffs who initially felt skeptical about the change later reported that young people were less agitated and hearings more productive once they entered court unbound. Years later, justices in the Wisconsin Supreme Court instituted the reform statewide.

    But Mitchell’s quest for the highest court has run up against quite formidable challenges.

    [ad_2]
    #Activist #Pastor #Running #Remake #Wisconsin #Supreme #Court
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • High Court Gave A Big Decision Regarding Pension! Government

    [ad_1]


    Never Miss An Update After Joining This Group
    Join Our What’s GroupClick Here


     

     

    Pension Scheme: You will not be able to take advantage of the monthly pension scheme of Rs 18,500 after March 31! know why

    Government employees got relief from the court regarding pension. The High Court has ruled in favor of the employees. Pension, which is a great support of old age, pension is of great importance to live the rest of the life with respect. In such a situation, the employees have got good news from the decision of the court.

    New Delhi: Government employees got relief from the court regarding pension. The High Court has ruled in favor of the employees. Pension, which is a great support of old age, pension is of great importance to live the rest of the life with respect. In such a situation, the employees have got good news from the decision of the court.

    Non-regular service period will also be added to total tenure

    According to the report of news agency PTI, the Lucknow bench of Allahabad High Court said on Friday that non-regular service period of government employees will also be added to their total tenure while providing pension. However, the bench has declared the petitioners entitled to the benefits of pension for the last three years only.

    This order was passed by a single bench of Justice Vivek Chaudhary while explaining the decision given by the Supreme Court in Prem Singh’s case in 2019 under section two of the Uttar Pradesh Pension for Qualifying Service and Validation Act 2021.

    The employee has given his services, whether permanent or temporary

    Justice Chowdhary said that eligibility for pension in Section 2 of the Uttar Pradesh Pension for Qualifying Service and Validation Act 2021 implies that the employee has given his services, even if the services are permanent are or temporary.

    The court gave its verdict by approving 51 writ petitions together

    The court has given this verdict by approving about 51 writ petitions filed separately on behalf of work in-charge employees, daily wage workers, ad hoc employees or seasonal collection amines. In the petitions, those orders of the government were challenged, in which it refused to consider the irregular services of the petitioners as eligible for pension by not adding them to their total service while taking the decision regarding grant of pension.

    The court cited this decision of the Supreme Court.

    In its decision, the bench, citing the decision given in the case of Prem Singh of the Supreme Court, said that even after working for the same number of years as the regular employees, the government employees of non-regular service Not adding it to the total length of service is discriminatory.

    18 months pending DA Arrear

    [ad_2]
    #High #Court #Gave #Big #Decision #Pension #Government

    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Comments on looks can’t be considered sexually coloured remarks: Delhi court

    Comments on looks can’t be considered sexually coloured remarks: Delhi court

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: A Delhi court has observed that mentioning the looks and gait of a person without any specific reference to the dress or any body part would not be counted as a sexually coloured remark.

    Additional Sessions Judge Rajinder Singh of Patiala House Courts made this observation while dismissing a woman’s plea against discharge of a man under Section 509 (word, gesture or act intended to insult the modesty of a woman) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

    Charges against two other men were framed under the same Section but they were discharged under Section 354A (sexual harassment).

    The woman had alleged that the three men made offensive comments and certain remarks about her and also used to stare at her with an ‘evil eye’.

    The court said that the alleged acts of the accused persons would not fall under Section 354A (1)(A) of the IPC while perusing the documents.

    “The woman specifically mentioned that he was murmuring something but she did not stop there to hear,” the court said while discharging the accused under section 509 of the IPC.

    The court also noted that there was no specific mention of any alleged words attributable to the man or no specific allegations that he made any sound or gesture or exhibiting any object intending it to be seen by the woman with the intention of insulting her modesty or intruding upon her privacy.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Comments #considered #sexually #coloured #remarks #Delhi #court

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )