A bench comprising Chief Justice J S Khehar and Justice D Y Chandrachud has so far ordered 14 states, including Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka, to fill up almost 4.3 lakh vacancies in the states' police force in a time-bound manner.
"The remaining states and UTs shall file affidavits within four weeks indicating the manner of filling up of vacancies in the police department," the bench said.
The court is now monitoring the filling up of the vacancies in each state and has asked the state governments to submit their roadmaps.
Today, hill state Uttarakhand submitted its roadmap for filling up the vacancies in police, which was taken on record by the court.
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Earlier, the top court had accepted the roadmap given by the Gujarat government and directed it to complete the recruitment process by August 31 next year.
It had also accepted the roadmap of Telangana which has 17,504 police vacancies across all ranks. The state said the process of filling up of posts was on and 9,862 vacancies will be filled up by September 1 this year.
For the remaining batch of 7642 vacant posts, the state government had informed the court that the recruitment process will end by March 31, 2019.
With regard to Rajasthan, the court had accepted its roadmap and directed that 20 per cent of the 15,701 vacancies across all ranks should be filled up this year, 30 per cent by March 31 next year and the remaining 50 per cent by March 31, 2019, failing which its home secretary would be held responsible.
It had also accepted the roadmap given by the Jharkhand government for filling up vacancies of over 10,000 constables, 3017 sub-inspectors and 72 deputy superintendents of police and directed the state authorities to strictly adhere to the time-line.
Jharkhand government had contended that the total cadre strength of its constables was 52,943 and 36,636 constables are currently working and there were 16,307 vacancies. Of these, 6,148 vacancies have been abolished and as a result the total vacancies for constables now stood at 10,159.
It had on April 24 directed the Uttar Pradesh government to fill over 1.5 lakh police vacancies in fours years, saying this will help in dealing with the law and order problem.
The court had also directed the governments of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka to fill up about 45,000 such vacancies in a time-bound manner, while expressing dissatisfaction with the responses of West Bengal in the matter.
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