CJI voices support for 50% representation for women in judiciary

Chief Justice of India NV Ramana insisted on 50 percent reservation for women in the judiciary on Sunday, 26 September. He encouraged similar demands of reservation in law colleges across the country.

CJI Ramana made these remarks in a felicitation ceremony organised by women advocates of Supreme Court for him and nine newly appointed judges, the CJI said women constitute only about 30% of the subordinate judiciary.

“I don’t want you to cry but with anger, you have to shout and demand that we need 50 per cent reservation,” he said.

The CJI said that it’s an issue of thousands of years of suppression and women are entitled to the reservation and added, “It’s a matter of right, and not a matter a charity.”

The CJI paraphrased Karl Marx to say, “Women of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains.”

“In High Courts, women judges constitute 11.5%. Here in the Supreme Court, we currently have four women Justices out of the sitting 33. That makes it just 12%. Of the 1.7 million advocates, only 15% are women. Only 2% of the elected representatives in the State Bar Councils are women…. There is no woman member in the Bar Council of India. This needs urgent correction,” Chief Justice Ramana said.

“I am also forcing the Executive for applying necessary correctives… I am happy to have colleagues in the Collegium who are progressive and determined to bridge the gap in the higher judiciary,” the CJI said.

Over the last 70 years, there have been only 8 Supreme Court judges, beginning with M Fathima Beevi in 1989.

Taking the total number to four, three women were sworn in as Supreme Court judges on 1 September. Justice Nagarathna is set to become India’s first woman Chief Justice in 2027 for a brief period of one month.

By editor

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