This website uses cookie or similar technologies, to enhance your browsing experience and provide personalised recommendations. By continuing to use our website, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
IndiaPost LiveIndiaPost LiveIndiaPost Live
  • Home
  • India
  • World
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
IndiaPost LiveIndiaPost Live
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • India
  • World
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • India News
  • State
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Trending
  • Sports
  • Career
  • Lifestyle
  • Languages
Follow US
© 2024 NM Media. All Rights Reserved.

News » India News » Judiciary under lens: Mahesh Jethmalani flags ‘growing perception’ of opacity, overreach in courts

India News

Judiciary under lens: Mahesh Jethmalani flags ‘growing perception’ of opacity, overreach in courts

NM Desk
Last updated: 18 April, 2025 5:47 PM
NM Desk
Share
Judiciary under lens: Mahesh Jethmalani flags ‘growing perception’ of opacity, overreach in courts
Judiciary under lens: Mahesh Jethmalani flags ‘growing perception’ of opacity, overreach in courts

New Delhi: Senior advocate and BJP Rajya Sabha MP Mahesh Jethmalani on Thursday raised serious concerns about what he described as an “emerging public perception” that the Indian judiciary lacks transparency, especially in cases involving alleged judicial corruption. Taking to X, Jethmalani also accused sections of the higher judiciary of overstepping their constitutional limits by encroaching into the executive’s domain.

“In very recent times a series of issues have conspired to create public perception that the Indian judiciary lacks transparency and accountability in dealing with sensitive issues pertaining to itself, the chief among them being judicial corruption,” Jethmalani wrote. He referred specifically to the controversy surrounding Justice Yashwant Varma, which he said had sparked demands for greater scrutiny of the judiciary, including public disclosure of judges’ assets and stricter actions against alleged misconduct.

“The #JusticeYashwantVarma issue has spawned the declaration of assets by judicial officers including those of the #SupremeCourt,” he wrote, adding that it has also led to growing demands to end the practice of quietly transferring judges accused of wrongdoing. Instead, Jethmalani advocated for “criminal investigations” and inquiries by bodies such as the Lokayukta and Lokpal into such cases.

Read More

When Style actor Sahil Khan made headlines for ‘dating’ Tiger Shroff’s mother Ayesha
When Style actor Sahil Khan made headlines for ‘dating’ Tiger Shroff’s mother Ayesha
Pakistan Cricket Board to let off opener Fakhar Zaman with reprimand
Pakistan Cricket Board to let off opener Fakhar Zaman with reprimand
ICYMI: Moment when New Zealand basked in Women’s T20 World Cup glory – WATCH
How New Zealand defied cricketing logic to win maiden Women’s T20 World Cup

In a separate but related critique, he warned of judicial overreach, particularly in how the higher judiciary was interpreting constitutional provisions in a manner that, in his view, intruded on executive powers. Citing a recent Supreme Court verdict mandating a three-month time limit for the President to decide on bills reserved by a state Governor, Jethmalani said the judgment was bound to “stir a hornet’s nest.”

He added that Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar had rightly stepped in to challenge the ruling. “It took the irrepressible & Hon’ble #VP of India #JagdeepDhankarji to take up cudgels,” Jethmalani wrote. He defended Dhankhar’s intervention despite the Vice President being only a “symbolic second head of the State,” arguing that the former jurist was merely fulfilling his “sworn obligation to uphold the Constitution.”

Jethmalani said Dhankhar had pointed out that the matter involved interpretation of constitutional provisions and should therefore have been decided by a Constitution Bench, as mandated by Article 145(3). “The pointing out of a patent constitutional flaw… that the 2 judge Bench decision was a nullity… would surely be in discharge of the Vice President’s duty,” he wrote.

You Might Also Like

When and Where to watch WWE Crown Jewel 2024 in India?

Fee hike issue: Delhi CM says notices issued to schools after complaints, warns of strict action

Full List of Ballon d’Or Awards from 1956 to 2024: Male and Female Winners

BJP flips Congress’s ‘vote theft’ claim, flags fake voter rolls in Opposition’s bastions

Teen stabbed to death in Delhi’s Seelampur; probe underway

TAGGED:judiciary Mahesh Jethmalanijudiciary news Mahesh JethmalaniMahesh Jethmalani judiciaryMahesh Jethmalani judiciary news
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Telegram Copy Link

Latest News

indiapost live
They have history and history of overlooking that as well: Jaishankar on Pak-US ties
India News
Centre conspiring to stop free ration of 55 lakh Punjabis: CM Bhagwant Mann
Centre conspiring to stop free ration of 55 lakh Punjabis: CM Bhagwant Mann
India News
Education revolution in Punjab: Government schools soar with record results under AAP, says CM Mann
LPG tanker blast in Hoshiarpur kills 2, injures 21; Punjab CM announces aid
India News
Bengal: Teacher thrashed by group of youth for objecting to public drinking
Bengal: Teacher thrashed by group of youth for objecting to public drinking
India News

You also Like

Valmiki Jayanti 2024: Inspiring posters and quotes in English and Hindi
India News

Valmiki Jayanti 2024: Inspiring posters and quotes in English and Hindi

NM Desk NM Desk 7 Min Read
Explained: Voting and counting process in the US, and how it’s different from India
India News

Explained: Voting and counting process in the US, and how it’s different from India

NM Desk NM Desk 3 Min Read
IIT Bombay halts caste data collection for placement after discrimination allegations
India News

IIT Bombay halts caste data collection for placement after discrimination allegations

NM Desk NM Desk 2 Min Read
IndiaPost LiveIndiaPost Live
Follow US
© 2024 NM Media. All Rights Reserved.
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account