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Bail for Union Carbide chief challenged

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NK SINGH Bhopal: A local lawyer has moved the court seeking cancellation of the absolute bail granted to Mr. Warren Ander son, chairman of the Union Carbide Corporation, whose Bhopal pesticide plant killed over 2,000 persons last December. Mr. Anderson, who was arrested here in a dramatic manner on December 7 on several charges including the non-bailable Section 304 IPC (culpable homicide not amounting to murder), was released in an even more dramatic manner and later secretly whisked away to Delhi in a state aircraft. The local lawyer, Mr. Quamerud-din Quamer, has contended in his petition to the district and sessions judge of Bhopal, Mr. V. S. Yadav, that the police had neither authority nor jurisdiction to release an accused involved in a heinous crime of mass slaughter. If Mr. Quamer's petition succeeds, it may lead to several complications, including diplomatic problems. The United States Government had not taken kindly to the arrest of the head of one of its most powerful mul...

MP Govt to withdraw 5 lakh court cases of petty crimes

NK SINGH

Published in India Today 15 December 1992

The Madhya Pradesh Governmentbelieves in the adage of better late than never. Last fortnight, it decided to grant an amnesty over cases of petty crimes pending in courts till 1987, with the exception of those concerning habitual offenders.

It means that 18,000 alleged small-time criminals will leave the courtrooms beaming. And the state Government's accountants will be delighted at saving about Rs.1 crore every year, the approximate cost of holding trials.

For people like Babulal, a handcart pusher, the directive is a godsend. In 1980 he was charged with "obstructing traffic" by the Morena police. His offence: parking his handcart on the road-side. Maximum penalty: Rs.50. Babulal has spent the last 12 years and a good deal of money in and out of various courtrooms.

Ajay Upadhyay, 23, a contractor was arrested in 1987. He was charged with smashing a bus windscreen during the anti-reservation agitation, for which the maximum punishment is a two-year sentence. But for the last five years, the case has been pending since there were no witnesses.

Babulal Gaur

The scheme is the brainchild of state Law Minister Babulal Gaur, a former lawyer whose practice thrived on such petty cases: "Being a lawyer I could recognise the enormity of the problem."

Enormous it certainly is. There are 22 lakh litigations pending in different Madhya Pradesh courts, of which five lakhs are petty crime cases, filed for minor transgressions like trespassing, fighting, traffic offences and gambling.

The Government plans to withdraw all these cases within three years. In fact, the target is to withdraw 50,000 cases by next January. The procedure is slow. But at least in Madhya Pradesh justice delayed is justice delivered.

India Today, 15 December 1992

India Today 15 December 1992



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