New Delhi: Chief Justice of India N V Ramana has written to Law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad seeking steps to resolve the poor digital connectivity in rural, tribal, remote and hilly areas that is "adversely impacting the pace of justice delivery".
The CJI referred to the digital divide and said "a whole generation of lawyers is being pushed out of the system" due to the technological inequality.
He was speaking during the release of a book Anomalies in Law and Justice, authored by former Supreme Court Judge Justice R V Raveendran in a virtual function here.
During the course of the panel discussion that followed the launch of the book, he informed that the matter of connectivity figured prominently in the two-day conference of Chief Justices of high courts that he had held recently.
"The poor connectivity in rural, tribal, remote and hilly areas is adversely impacting the pace of justice delivery and is also depriving thousands of young lawyers across the country of their livelihood.
"A whole generation of lawyers is being pushed out of the system due to digital divide," the CJI said.
Justice Ramana also said that he recently wrote to the minister of Law, Communications and IT highlighting these issues and requested him to initiate steps on priority to bridge the digital divide and also to evolve a mechanism to help the advocates who have lost livelihood due to the Covid pandemic and who are in dire need of financial assistance.
The CJI also highlighted the need to declare the legal professionals and associated functionaries as frontline workers and the need to vaccinate them all on priority.
"To recognise all the functionaries of the courts, including the advocates, as front-line workers for the purpose of providing pandemic related relief. To provide financial support to advocates, especially the junior advocates, who are struggling to make both ends meet due to loss of work for more than a year since the onset of a pandemic," the letter demanded.
The CJI requested the Law minister to take up these issues with the concerned Ministries/Departments at the highest level.
Further, the judicial infrastructure needs to be streamlined and revamped to deal with the challenges of pendency, stated the letter, adding that a blueprint of the proposal to set up the National Judicial Infrastructure Corporation (NJIC) is in the final stages of preparation and will be shared with the Union Government shortly.