The tactic, in which state governments raze the homes and businesses of people as acts of retribution, has been on the rise ...
Wives of sitting judges, including Chief Justice of India ... top court to perform the ceremony along with the construction ...
Equating ’bulldozer justice’ with a lawless state of affairs where might is right, the Supreme Court on Wednesday laid down ...
India's Supreme Court on Wednesday strongly criticised states which were demolishing properties of suspected criminals, a ...
India's Supreme Court has said that authorities cannot demolish homes merely because a person has been accused of a crime and ...
Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud ... to take nearly 29 months for completion. The new building is ...
Justice isn’t found on the tracks of a bulldozer – this is essentially what the Supreme Court underlined on Wednesday, as it ...
The Executive cannot become a judge, decide that an accused is guilty and punish him by demolishing his properties as such an act would be transgressing its limits, the Supreme Court said on Wednesday ...
A nine-judge Constitution Bench has finally put a quietus to an issue pending in the courts for over three decades, striking a balance between public welfare and private property rights ...
The Tribune, the largest selling English daily in North India, publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any ...
The judgement said that "even the accused or the convicts have certain rights and safeguards in the form of constitutional ...