Lawyers blame AP CM for delay in setting up of AP High Court

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Press Trust of India Visakhapatnam
Last Updated : May 10 2015 | 10:57 PM IST
Andhra Pradesh Advocates' Joint Action Committee today blamed Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu for allegedly delaying finalisation of the location of the Andhra Pradesh High Court.
Visakhapatnam Bar Association (VBA) and Joint Action Committee co-ordinator J Prithvi Raj said that at a time when advocates in Telangana and the Telangana state government have been exerting pressure on the central government for immediate bifurcation of the common High Court in Hyderabad, Naidu is yet to initiate any step to set up a high court in Andhra Pradesh.
The committee plans to launch a fresh agitation for immediate setting up of the Andhra Pradesh High Court and its future course of action is to be decided at a meeting to be held either at Ongole or Rajahmundry in June, he said.
He said that the AP Re-organisation Act provides for a separate AP High Court which need not be set up in the capital and could be established anywhere in the state.
As per provisions of the AP Re-organisation Act, the central government has assured financial assistance for provisions of basic requirements for a High Court and Union Law Minister D V Sadananda Gowda had said that the Centre would quickly establish a separate AP High Court if the government finalise its location, gave infrastructure as well as basic facilities to establish the same, he said.
Despite this, he said that AP CM Naidu is still silent about setting up the AP High Court citing "silly reasons" like government being cash-strapped and lack of infrastructure.
"When Andhra Pradesh was separated from the composite Madras Presidency in 1956, the then AP government had set up an AP High Court, but our chief minister has deliberately delayed finalising the High Court's location and creating infrastructure for the same. MLAs and MPs from AP also lack political will to set up the AP High Court immediately," he said.
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First Published: May 10 2015 | 10:57 PM IST

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