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Union Law Ministry: Calcutta High Court Tops Backlog With 94% Of Cases Pending Over 50 Years

Calcutta High Court leads backlog with 94% of cases pending over 50 years, reveals Union Law Ministry data highlighting urgent need to address long-standing judicial delays in India.

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Union Law Ministry: Calcutta High Court Tops Backlog With 94% Of Cases Pending Over 50 Years

CALCUTTA: India’s judicial system is facing a severe backlog crisis, with thousands of cases pending for decades across high courts and district courts. The Calcutta High Court stands out as the worst affected, accounting for the vast majority of cases pending for over 50 years. This growing backlog highlights critical challenges in timely justice delivery and calls for urgent reforms to address the persistent delays in our courts.

Out of the total 2,329 cases pending for over five decades across all high courts in India, the Calcutta High Court alone accounts for a staggering 2,185 cases, that is 94% of the total. Shockingly, the court has added 140 more such cases to its backlog in just the last year, signaling a worsening crisis rather than improvement.

The judicial pendency is not limited to just the Calcutta HC:

The oldest pending case dates back to 1951, unresolved for 74 years, underscoring systemic inefficiencies in timely justice delivery.

Apart from Calcutta HC, only eight other high courts have cases pending for over 50 years:

The district judiciary fares marginally better in dealing with ultra-old cases. There are 1,113 cases pending for over five decades in district courts, with 39% of them coming from Bengal. Yet, the overall pendency of cases older than 10 years at district levels is alarmingly high, standing at 15,77,191 cases.

Addressing these concerns in the Rajya Sabha, Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal pointed out that several factors contribute to the prolonged pendency:

Judge vacancies remain a major concern, but are not solely responsible for pendency, the Minister said. As of August 1, out of a sanctioned strength of 1,122 judges in high courts, 778 were in position, leaving 344 vacancies. The government is processing 138 proposals for appointments, while recommendations for 206 vacancies are still awaited from the Supreme Court Collegium.

Despite Supreme Court directives prioritizing the clearance of cases older than 10 years, the backlog remains significant. The government has taken steps such as:

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