Merely 10 per cent women judges in India's higher judiciary

IS judiciary, like most other institutions in the country, also a man’s preserve? If one looks at the number of women judges in higher judiciary, that seems to be the case.
For representational purpose
For representational purpose

NEW DELHI: IS judiciary, like most other institutions in the country, also a man’s preserve? If one looks at the number of women judges in higher judiciary, that seems to be the case.

The Supreme Court has just one woman judge while the 24 high courts also have poor representation of women.  There are only 69 women judges in HCs making the total percentage of women judges in HCs a mere 10 percent. The low representation of women in the higher judiciary indicates gender discrimination in the institution in whose uprightness everyone in the country swears by.

The statistics were revealed by government in the Parliament on Wednesday. In a written reply in the Lok Sabha, minister of state for law and Justice PP Chaudhary disclosed the figures, saying there is no provision for any reservation in appointment of judges.  He, however, added that the government has requested the Chief Justices of the High Courts that to give due consideration to suitable candidates from amongst women.  According to the latest government data, female judges are outnumbered by male judges in the Supreme Court as well as all 24 high courts of the country.

As on June 28 this year, there is only one woman judge among 27 in the apex court.  Justice R Banumathi, who was elevated as a judge of the SC three years ago is only the sixth woman to become an SC judge since independence.  Of the total 665 judges in HCs across the country, there are only 69 women judges and eight HCs do not even have a single woman judge.

Bombay HC has the best sex ratio with 11 of 74 judges being woman. The Delhi High court has the second highest number of women judges as 10 of its 38 judges are women judicial officers.

The states which have zero representation from women in higher judiciary are: Chhatisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Manipur, Meghalaya, Tripura and Uttarakhand. The Allahabad HC has 82 judges, the most of any court, but only six are women.

The poor representation of women in higher judiciary is all the more striking because four major HCs in the country are currently led by women judges—Justice Manjula Chellur who is the Chief Justice of the Bombay HC, Justice Gita Mittal who is the Acting Chief Justice of the Delhi HC, Justice Indira Banerjee who is the Chief Justice of Madras HC and Justice Nishita Nirmal Mhatre who is the acting Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court.

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