The Supreme Court Of India(SCI) will put a portrait of a woman lawyer in one of its
libraries for the first time in the 67-year history of Supreme Court Of India(SCI)
A colour photograph of illustrious barrister Kapila Hingorani, known in legal circles as the Mother of PILs, will be seen alongside images of judicial luminaries MC Setalvad, CK Daphtry and RK Jain in the court’s second library.
“This was long overdue,” Chief Justice Dipak Misra said after releasing her portrait on Tuesday. The honour for Hingorani should have come much earlier as she was a true harbinger of justice for the voiceless, he added.
Hingorani, the first Indian woman to graduate from Cardiff Law School in Britain, was the first lawyer to file a public interest litigation (PIL) in the top court in 1979.
Her plea was for prisoners awaiting trial for years — sometimes spending more time in prison than the maximum sentence they would have got if convicted for the crimes they were accused of.
Her PIL led the top court to issue extensive guidelines for speedy trials and about 40,000 undertrial prisoners were released.
Born in 1927 in Nairobi, Hingorani was inspired by Mahatma Gandhi.
The SCI had just three woman lawyers when she began practising there. She was 86 when she died in 2013 after a remarkable career spanning nearly 60 years.
Hingorani and her three children — lawyers Aman, Priya and Shweta — fought more than 100 cases in the top court.
The SCI Bar Association president Rupinder Suri said the portrait is a rightful recognition of Hingorani’s achievements as a member of the bar. “She was not just a lawyer but a barrister too. She could have lived in the UK, but chose India,” he said.
A plaque at her Cardiff alma mater also honours the pioneer among India’s woman lawyers
A colour photograph of illustrious barrister Kapila Hingorani, known in legal circles as the Mother of PILs, will be seen alongside images of judicial luminaries MC Setalvad, CK Daphtry and RK Jain in the court’s second library.
“This was long overdue,” Chief Justice Dipak Misra said after releasing her portrait on Tuesday. The honour for Hingorani should have come much earlier as she was a true harbinger of justice for the voiceless, he added.
Hingorani, the first Indian woman to graduate from Cardiff Law School in Britain, was the first lawyer to file a public interest litigation (PIL) in the top court in 1979.
Her plea was for prisoners awaiting trial for years — sometimes spending more time in prison than the maximum sentence they would have got if convicted for the crimes they were accused of.
Her PIL led the top court to issue extensive guidelines for speedy trials and about 40,000 undertrial prisoners were released.
Born in 1927 in Nairobi, Hingorani was inspired by Mahatma Gandhi.
The SCI had just three woman lawyers when she began practising there. She was 86 when she died in 2013 after a remarkable career spanning nearly 60 years.
Hingorani and her three children — lawyers Aman, Priya and Shweta — fought more than 100 cases in the top court.
The SCI Bar Association president Rupinder Suri said the portrait is a rightful recognition of Hingorani’s achievements as a member of the bar. “She was not just a lawyer but a barrister too. She could have lived in the UK, but chose India,” he said.
A plaque at her Cardiff alma mater also honours the pioneer among India’s woman lawyers
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