February 17, 2022
2 mins read

Collegium clears 16 names for judges of Bombay, Madras HC

The top court collegium approved the proposal for appointment of Justice Ahanthem Bimol Singh, additional judge of the Manipur High Court, as permanent judge of that high court….reports Asian Lite News

The Supreme Court Collegium, headed by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana, has recommended the appointment of 10 advocates as judges to the Bombay High Court and six advocates as judges to the Madras High Court.

A statement published on the website of the top court said: “The Supreme Court Collegium in its meeting held on 16th February, 2022 has approved the proposal for elevation of the following advocates as judges in the Bombay High Court: Kishore Chandrakant Sant, Valmiki Menezes SA, Kamal Rashmi Khata, Sharmila Uttamrao Deshmukh, Arun Ramnath Pednekar, Sandeep Vishnupant Marne, Gauri Vinod Godse, Rajesh Shantaram Patil, Arif Saleh Doctor, and Somasekhar Sundaresan.”

In another statement, the top court said: “The Supreme Court Collegium in its meeting held on 16th February, 2022 has approved the proposal for elevation of the following advocates as judges in the Madras High Court: Nidumolu Mala, Sunder Mohan, Kabali Kumaresh Babu, S. Sounthar, Abdul Ghani Abdul Hameed, and R. John Sathyan.”

The top court collegium approved the proposal for appointment of Justice Ahanthem Bimol Singh, additional judge of the Manipur High Court, as permanent judge of that high court.

Recently, the Centre had notified the appointment of Acting Chief Justice Munishwar Nath Bhandari as Chief Justice of the Madras High Court.

The notification, published on the website of the Ministry of Law and Justice, said: “In exercise of the powers conferred by clause (1) of Article 217 of the Constitution of India, the President is pleased to appoint Justice Munishwar Nath Bhandari, Judge of the Madras High Court, to be the Chief Justice of Madras High Court with effect from the date he assumes charge of his office.”

In January, the Supreme Court Collegium, which is headed by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana, in a statement, said: “The Supreme Court Collegium in its meeting held on December 14, 2021/ January 29, 2022 has recommended elevation of Mr Justice Munishwar Nath Bhandari, Judge, Madras High Court (PHC: Rajasthan) as Chief Justice of Madras High Court”.

In another decision, the Centre also notified the appointment of the seven advocates as judges in the Andhra Pradesh High Court: Konakanti Sreenivasa Reddy @Srinivasa Reddy, Gannamaneni Ramakrishna Prasad, Venkateswarlu Nimmagadda, Tarlada Rajasekhar Rao, Satti Subba Reddy, Ravi Cheemalapati, and Vaddiboyana Sujatha.

The Centre also notified the appointment of three advocates as judges in the Madhya Pradesh High Court: Maninder Singh Bhatti, Dwarka Dhish Bansal @ DD Bansal, and Milind Ramesh Phadke, as well as three judicial officers: Amar Nath Kesharwani, Prakash Chandra Gupta, and Dinesh Kumar Paliwal.

The Central government also notified the appointment of the following advocates as Judges in the Orissa High Court: V. Narasingh, Biraja Prasanna Satapathy, and Sri Raman Murahari @ M.S. Raman.

ALSO READ: BJP estimating damage caused by rebels in Uttarakhand

Previous Story

Apex court grills central govt on One Rank, One Pension

Next Story

Supreme Court slams ‘knee-jerk’ appointments of tribunal vacancies

Latest from India News

India emerges as a global humanitarian powerhouse

India’s steady evolution into a global humanitarian leader reflects a fusion of compassion, strategy, and capability — a quiet revolution redefining power through empathy and decisive action. India’s foreign policy has undergone

India Hails Trump’s Role in Gaza Deal

Delhi credits Washington for reviving hopes of Middle East stability…reports Asian Lite News India has praised US President Donald Trump for his role in securing the landmark Gaza agreement, saying the move
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Madras HC turns heat on EC for second Covid wave

The minister had petitioned the court seeking direction to the

Court quashes convictions for wrongly imprisoned asylum seekers

It is thought that as many as 67 people could