Posted by admin_kas on 2025-07-26 22:04:19 |
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Says our collective responsibility to
deliver justice, legal-aid to defence personnel, tribal communities
KS News Desk
Srinagar, Jul 26: Chief Minister Omar Abdullah Saturday delivered the keynote address at the North Zone Regional Conference of National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) on “Reaffirming the Constitutional Vision of Justice for Defence Personnel & Tribals”held at SKICC Srinagar.
This constitutionally
significant conference focuses on advancing the rights and entitlements of
defence personnel and tribal communities—two segments of society that, in the
Chief Minister’s words, “one defends the Constitution with unflinching resolve”
and the other has “long waited for its full embrace.”
Addressing the audience at
SKICC, CM said that this Regional Conference was of great significance to
deliberate and collectively reflect on the foundational promise of our Republic
for realization of justice—social, economic, and political which is enshrined
in the preamble and concretised in Article 39A of our Constitution, which
enjoins the State to ensure that access to justice is not curtailed by economic
or other disabilities.
Paying tribute to the
service and sacrifices of defence personnel, many of whom hail from Jammu and
Kashmir, the Chief Minister emphasized the need for swift, compassionate legal
redressal for those serving in inhospitable terrains under difficult
circumstances. He highlighted the systemic legal barriers faced by defence
personnel in matters such as pension disputes and service-related grievances
owing to their geographic remoteness, and the distinct constraints of military
life.
CM commended the J&K
State Legal Services Authority for its initiative in amending its legal aid
rules to expressly include serving and retired defence personnel. CM said that
establishment of dedicated legal aid clinics in cantonments and in districts
with significant ex-servicemen populations should be prioritised. “Equally
important is the need to ensure that families of defence personnel—particularly
widows, aged parents, and dependent children—receive empathetic, expert, and
timely legal support,” CM said, adding that para-legal volunteers trained specifically
in military legal issues should be deployed in areas with high defence
populations. Simultaneously, technology must be harnessed to democratise
access—through mobile apps, virtual consultation platforms, and user-friendly
legal information portals. Justice, in our times, must not merely be
available—it must be accessible.
On tribal communities, CM
said that they were custodians of rich cultural and ecological heritage.
Jammu & Kashmir is home to several Scheduled Tribes, including Gujjars,
Bakarwals, Pahadis, Gaddis and Sippis, who have preserved ancient traditions
while braving difficult terrains.
“Our Government has
correspondingly augmented its developmental efforts. This year, the capital
expenditure for tribal welfare has been raised to ₹98 crores. Six Eklavya
Model Residential Schools have been made operational, 222 smart classrooms have
been established in tribal-dominated schools, and healthcare services have been
expanded through mobile medical units. The Tribal Research Institute has also
been commissioned. These interventions reflect our commitment to combine
dignity with development. Yet, development alone cannot substitute justice.
Structural barriers to legal literacy, representation, and redressal continue
to persist among tribal populations—owing to linguistic, cultural, and
geographic factors.
CM noted that the Legal
Services Authority has commendably operationalised 255 legal aid clinics,
including in tribal villages and correctional institutions, supported by 527
panel lawyers and 561 para-legal volunteers.
CM expressed the hope that
para-legal volunteers are trained from within tribal communities themselves.
“This will ensure that legal support is rendered in familiar idioms, dialects,
and cultural frameworks. We must also expand mobile legal aid vans, promote the
use of Tele-Law platforms, and facilitate virtual hearings. Justice, if it is
to be meaningful, must reach every remote hamlet—from Poonch to Kishtwar, from
Rajouri to Karnah,” he said.
Chief Minister Omar
Abdullah also spoke about the sensitive balance that must be maintained between
national security and the rights of tribal citizens. Many tribal regions are
located in border belts or areas of heightened security oversight. However, law
enforcement must not translate into legal disenfranchisement. Mechanisms for
lodging complaints, accessing courts, and redressing grievances must be made
transparent, timely, and responsive.
CM said that Alternate
Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanisms also offer immense promise. Lok Adalats,
mediation centres, and village-level panchayat forums, when duly sensitised,
can provide swift, culturally respectful adjudication—especially in matters
related to land rights, service entitlements, and local grievances. These
models need to be institutionalised and resourced accordingly.
CM stated that
capacity-building is essential for Judicial officers, legal aid lawyers, and
field functionaries who must be trained in tribal customary law, military
jurisprudence, and the ethics of constitutional service. Only through sustained
cross-learning can our justice system be truly responsive to the diversity it
is meant to serve.
Highlighting the
Government’s vision, the Chief Minister informed that his Government has
sanctioned establishment of a dedicated Law University in Jammu and Kashmir
with an initial allocation of ₹50 crore. This institution will focus on
specialized legal education and research in fields such as tribal law, military
justice, constitutional studies, and environmental law.
Quoting Mahatma Gandhi, the
Chief Minister concluded, “A nation’s greatness is measured by how it treats
its weakest members.” He reaffirmed the Government’s unwavering support to
Legal Services Authorities and their partners in delivering justice to the most
marginalised
The conference was also addressed by Justice Surya Kant Judge of the Supreme Court of India and Executive Chairman NALSA; Arjun Ram Meghwal, Minister of State Ministry of Law and Justice Government of India; Manoj Sinha Lieutenant Governor, Jammu and Kashmir; Justice Arun Palli, Chief Justice of High Court of Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh; Justice Sanjeev Kumar Executive Chairman J&K Legal Services Authority; Justice Sindhu Sharma Executive Chairperson, Ladakh Legal Services Authority; Lieutenant General Pratik Sharma, General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Northern Command.
The conference was attended
by the members of the Judiciary, Mian Altaf Member of Parliament, members of
the Armed Forces, representatives of the Tribal Communities, Senior Officers of
the Government of Jammu & Kashmir and other States, and members of the
Legal Fraternity.