Wheels of justice: Cutting India’s legal backlog on the move
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 KAPURHOL — By the side of a busy main road in western India, Nizamuddin Sheikh perched on his crutches and gave a toothless grin, as the trouser leg where his right limb once was flapped in the wind. The  wizened 52-year-old farmer has had a court case hanging over his head  for the last seven years after he threatened a neighbor with an iron bar  in a heated land dispute. But the prospect of a  stiff fine — or worse — was lifted after he agreed to hold his ears in a  traditional sign of public apology and shake hands with his victim in  front of a judge in the back of a bright yellow bus. “I’m  very happy that the matter has been resolved without a payment,” Sheikh  told AFP after negotiating the steps down from the bus into the muddy  car park. “It was very quick.” Sheikh is one  satisfied customer of India’s first mobile court, which aims to dispense  speedy justice for free in hard-to-reach rural areas and ease the  burden on the country’s slow-moving and chronically over-burdened  courts.On one blustery, overcast day punctuated  by heavy monsoon downpours, the distinctive, bright yellow vehicle  stopped in front of a community center in Kapurhol, about 30 kilometers  (19 miles) from Pune in Maharashtra state..... MORE Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100807com3.html | 
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