351 POSTS
Prasad Nichenametla, based out of Hyderabad, covers all developments in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, with special focus on politics, policy, economy and governance. Prasad joined ThePrint in September 2023. He can be reached at prasad.n@theprint.in
On one hand the police and politicians face pressure to deal with justice. The judiciary on the other hand feels no such pressure and every case takes decades to resolve. In many cases, the criminals are able to live a free life on bail while the cases drag on for years. The case of Uphaar cinema fire is one such example, among thousands, where the Supreme Court went out of its way to let the convicted walk free. When those tasked with administering justice fail, we get these lynchings and extra-judicial killings.
Hindustan me kvl ek hi sound gunjta rehna chahie wo hai ……Satyamev jyete !
Police got no brain. Charge n prove they did it. Hope this policemen will go to hell
Judiciary and justice are like journalist and facts…libturds trying to promote the money making racket of lawyers, judges claiming some nonsense about law is ironic. The law in India is a business run by crooks and unaccountable charlatans.
Justice lives in every right thinking person’s heart not in the court room and chambers of clowns wearing gowns – the public knows justice like a baby knows its mother’s voice, they dont need to get lessons on the nature of justice.
Police got no brain. Charge n prove they did it. Hope this policemen will go to hell once they died.
whatever you say “I support what police did”