PM Modi on the diamond jubilee of the Supreme Court...

S Venkateshwari
PM Modi on the diamond jubilee of the supreme Court...


On Sunday, prime minister Narendra Modi declared that every indian citizen has the "ease of justice" and asked the supreme court to work with all relevant parties to develop their ability so that the changeover from the previous legal system to the new one goes smoothly. The prime minister launched the supreme Court's Diamond Jubilee celebration by highlighting the government's efforts to repeal criminal laws from the colonial era and enact new laws such the Bhartiya Nagrik Suraksha Samhita, Bhartiya Nyaya Samhita, and Bhartiya Sakshya Adhiniyam.

The criminal Procedure Code, the indian Evidence Act, and the indian Penal Code will be replaced by these statutes, which parliament approved last month but have not yet been notified of. The prime minister claims that these significant modifications have ushered in a new era for India's legal, police, and investigative institutions and demonstrate the government's ongoing efforts to modernize legislation to better reflect current circumstances and industry standards.

"Tomorrow's dynamic india will be built on the economic policies of today...The laws that are being established today will support India's promising future.In order to ensure a smooth transition from the old to the new legislation, it is essential that training and capacity-building programs for government workers be initiated, Modi stated. "I ask the supreme court to step up and start developing the capacity of all parties involved," said Modi, expressing his congratulations to Chief Justice of india Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud and all other supreme court justices on the start of the Diamond Jubilee year since the supreme Court's founding on january 28, 1950.

The prime minister also emphadata-sized how important it is that indian laws take into account both modern practices and indian culture. In our legal legislation, he remarked, "the convergence of indian values and modernity is equally essential."





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