The Uttarakhand High Court's firm intervention ensured that Sujata, a deputy director with the state's women welfare and child development department, received her long-overdue promotion just one day before her retirement—ending a four-year wait for justice.
The department issued the promotion order on Tuesday, promoting Sujata to the rank of joint director, after the court issued a stern warning and raised the prospect of contempt proceedings against officials for flouting its earlier directive.
The High Court had first ordered Sujata’s promotion back on September 5, 2024, but the state had failed to act.
Frustrated by the inaction, Sujata filed a petition accusing the government of deliberately stalling her promotion. With her retirement looming, her counsel urged the court to act swiftly.
“It has been almost six months… Prima facie, the disobedience appears to be contemptuous of the direction issued by this court. Hence, the respondent must show cause as to why the disobedience should not be made the subject of contempt proceedings,” the court had observed earlier, pulling up the departmental secretary.
On April 24, the court ordered the state to implement the departmental promotion committee’s recommendation by April 28. Just in time, the department complied, and additional secretary Prashant Arya signed the promotion order. The case was then closed by the division bench comprising Chief Justice G Narendar and Justice Alok Mahra.
Sujata retired on Wednesday with her rightful designation finally recognized—a bittersweet end to a prolonged bureaucratic delay that needed judicial muscle to resolve.
(With inputs from ToI)
The department issued the promotion order on Tuesday, promoting Sujata to the rank of joint director, after the court issued a stern warning and raised the prospect of contempt proceedings against officials for flouting its earlier directive.
The High Court had first ordered Sujata’s promotion back on September 5, 2024, but the state had failed to act.
Frustrated by the inaction, Sujata filed a petition accusing the government of deliberately stalling her promotion. With her retirement looming, her counsel urged the court to act swiftly.
“It has been almost six months… Prima facie, the disobedience appears to be contemptuous of the direction issued by this court. Hence, the respondent must show cause as to why the disobedience should not be made the subject of contempt proceedings,” the court had observed earlier, pulling up the departmental secretary.
On April 24, the court ordered the state to implement the departmental promotion committee’s recommendation by April 28. Just in time, the department complied, and additional secretary Prashant Arya signed the promotion order. The case was then closed by the division bench comprising Chief Justice G Narendar and Justice Alok Mahra.
Sujata retired on Wednesday with her rightful designation finally recognized—a bittersweet end to a prolonged bureaucratic delay that needed judicial muscle to resolve.
(With inputs from ToI)
You may also like
'Chun chun ke jawab milega': Amit Shah vows retaliation after Pahalgam terror attack
Retro is a brutal rollercoaster that is visually poetic, says director Rathna Kumar
GRAP 1 curbs revoked in Delhi-NCR as air quality improves
Kate Middleton borrows Claudia Winkleman's Traitors wardrobe with cashmere piece they both love
Arsenal vow to take action after fans filmed aiming alleged racist abuse at PSG stars