On
20 May 1951, Dr. Ambedkar addressed a conference on the occasion of
Buddha Jayanti organised at Ambedkar Bhawan, Delhi. Photo: Wikimedia
Commons - CC0 1.0
New Delhi: The Bombay high court on Wednesday, December 1, took suo motu cognisance of a stalled project of the Maharashtra government to publish the writings and speeches of B.R. Ambedkar, Live Law reported.
Taking note of an article on the matter published in Marathi daily Loksatta,
the division bench of Justices Prasanna B. Varale and Shriram M. Modak
described the stalled progress of the project as a “sorry state of
affairs”.
The bench further directed the court’s registry to file a suo motu
Public Interest Litigation (PIL) into the matter for the consideration
of the chief justice of the Bombay high court, Dipankar Datta.
The Loksatta article notes that the Maharashtra government had planned to publish Ambedkar’s entire oeuvre, to be titled The Writings and Speeches of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar
and publish nine lakh copies of the same. The government thus purchased
printing paper worth Rs 5.45 crore as well as Rs 8.17 lakh worth of
binding cloth in November, 2017. However, since 2017, only 33,000 copies
have been printed and only 3,675 copies have been made available for
distribution in various libraries.
The
bench went on to note that these volumes of writing are in demand, not
only by researchers and members of the legal fraternity but also by the
public in general.
On the basis of the article, the
court stated that the government printing presses located in Mumbai,
Pune and Nagpur were understaffed and burdened by outdated machinery and
were thus unable to adhere to the timelines set for printing Ambedkar’s
works.
The
vast quantities of printing paper, now lying in godowns, were described
as being “safe” by the chief of the Directorate of Government Printing,
Stationery and Publications, Rupendra More, noting that the paper,
being of “excellent quality”, “lasts for many years”.
“Considering the nature of the
grievance raised in the news item, we are treating it as a matter for
public interest litigation,” the bench said.
source ; /thewire.in/
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