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Case backlog peaks despite increase of disposal rate

Gulam Rabbani :
Chief Justice Hasan Foez Siddique after taking the charge as the head of the judiciary has taken various initiatives to reduce the case backlog in the courts across the country. However, piling up of the cases is now on the peak.

Sources said, a huge backlog of around 42 lakh cases is now pending with the courts across the country, including the Appellate and High Court Divisions of the Supreme Court, which is causing immeasurable suffering to the litigants.

The number of such backlogs is growing higher since the number of filing of cases is increasing day by day due to the huge population in the country, said SC sources.

An SC study report said a total of 41,96,603 cases were pending with all the courts in the country after 15,71,617 were filed and 14,71,402 were disposed of till December 31 last year.

Of those, 19,928 cases were pending with the Appellate Division, 5,16,674 with the High Court Division and 36,50,001 with the lower courts till that day.

The numbers of civil cases, criminal cases, contempt petitions, and cases under inquiry and investigations were 16,88,195; 23,88,610; 1,19,798 and 1,51,978 respectively at that time.

The Appellate Division, High Court Division and subordinate courts have disposed of a total of 5,406; 87,474 and 13,78,522 cases respectively from January 1 to December 31 last year.

According to the SC report, a total of 7,89,179 cases (4,63,235 civil and 3,25,943 criminal cases) have been pending for more than five years with the courts in the districts.

The number of pending cases increased last year as those which were pending with the Anti-Terrorism Tribunal, Anti-Human Trafficking Offence Tribunal, and Cyber Tribunal in 2021 have been added to last year’s, the SC study report said.

Legal experts have been saying the appointment of competent, experienced and honest judges at the courts and continuous monitoring of their activities can help reduce the backlog.

Sources said there are now eight judges for the Appellate Division, 90 judges for the High Court Division and around 1,800 judges for the lower courts across the country for dealing with and disposing of the cases.

Chief Justice Hasan Foez Siddique appointed eight judges of the High Court division of the Supreme Court to monitor the proceedings and to reduce the case backlog of the subordinate courts across the country by speeding up the work there.

Each of the judges was asked to monitor the proceedings of each of the eight divisions of the country. Eight judicial officers had also been appointed for eight divisions to provide the secretarial assistance to the High Court judges who were appointed to monitor the lower court proceedings.

Following the monitoring system initiated by Chief Justice Hasan Foez Siddique, the rate of case disposal has been increased, said Md Saifur Rahman, Registrar of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court.

Around 100 percent disposal is taking place in 35 districts in proportionate to the filing of the cases, he said. If this trend continues, the backlog of cases will come to a tolerable level in the next few years.