* Gunman convicted in death of Jane Creba found guilty of shooting man in Ottawa     * Defence ministry to procure 97 LCA MCA    * Israel Strikes Gaza As Massive Iran Attack Threat Puts Region On Edge     * Netflix's new Prince Andrew movie indulges our desire for royal secrets     * Trump and Johnson build alliance on the falsehood of the stolen election

Lawyers on TV are ‘killing’ Supreme Court

Posted in Featured, S. Asia

Published on May 12, 2018 with No Comments

Justice Arun Mishra of Supreme Court of India lashed out at advocates who, he said, were targeting apex court judges within the court as well as on TV debates, thereby “killing the institution”.

Justice Mishra’s comments, his first reference to the recent controversies around the top court, came when he was hearing a petition by the Medical Council of India against a Kerala government ordinance that allowed two medical colleges to admit students despite a Supreme Court order to the contrary.

In January, Justice Mishra found himself to be collateral damage when four senior judges held a press conference in January to speak out against the alleged arbitrary allocation of cases by Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra. They claimed that sensitive matters were being allocated to junior judges.

Now Justice Mishra vented his ire at senior advocates when they kept persisting with their arguments without giving an opportunity to the judges to speak. Each lawyer wanted to be heard out of turn.

“No one is spared.You are attacking all.Targeting all. With one arrow, you want to kill everyone,” Justice Mishra said. He was critical of lawyers participating in panel discussion on TV channels. “They discuss court proceedings on TV. We are abused like anything,” the judge said.

“You are killing this institution every day. Lawyers will survive only if this institution survives,” the judge warned. Senior advocate Vikas Singh, who was present in the court on behalf of MCI, said he supported Justice Mishra’s view. “An institution cannot be maligned the way it is happening. It’s not in the interest of the country. Even if someone has to be critical, he or she must weigh the consequences before speaking anything,” Singh, who is also president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, said.

 

No Comments

Comments for Lawyers on TV are ‘killing’ Supreme Court are now closed.