Rs.7,210 cr outlay approved by Cabinet for 3rd phase of eCourts scheme for 4 years

The eCourts mission mode project is the prime mover for improving access to justice using technology

The eCourts mission mode project is the prime mover for improving access to justice using technology
The eCourts mission mode project is the prime mover for improving access to justice using technology

eCourts mission mode project is a pan-India project monitored and funded by Department of Justice of the Union Law Ministry

On Wednesday, the Union Cabinet approved the third phase of the eCourts project, with a financial outlay of Rs.7,210 crore for the next four years (starting from 2023 onwards).

Information and Broadcasting Minister Anurag Thakur told media persons after the cabinet meeting that the eCourts mission mode project is the prime mover for improving access to justice using technology.

The eCourts mission mode project is a pan-India project monitored and funded by the Department of Justice of the Union Law Ministry.

It aims to provide efficient and time-bound citizen-centric service delivery as detailed in the eCourt project litigant’s charter. It also aims to develop, install, and implement decision support systems in courts.

The scheme also automates the processes to provide transparency in the accessibility of information to its stakeholders.

The e-Courts third phase aims to usher in a regime of maximum ease of justice by moving towards digital, online, and paperless courts through digitization of the entire court records including legacy records, and by bringing in universalization of e-filing and e-payments through saturation of all court complexes with e-Sewa Kendras.

It will put in place intelligent smart systems enabling data-based decision-making for judges and registries while scheduling or prioritizing cases.

The main objective of the third phase is to create a unified technology platform for the judiciary, which will provide a seamless and paperless interface between the courts, the litigants, and other stakeholders, official sources said.

Under its first phase in 2007, a large number of court complexes, computer server rooms, and judicial service centres were readied for the computerization of the district courts.

The district and taluka court complexes covered in the first phase were computerized with the installation of hardware, LAN, and Case Information Software (CIS), for providing basic case-related services to the litigants and the lawyers.

In the second phase of the scheme, the covered courts were provisioned for additional hardware with (1+3) systems per courtroom, the uncovered courts of the first phase and the newly established courts with (2+6) systems per courtroom, and the court complexes were provisioned for hardware, LAN, etc.

[With Inputs from IANS]

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