Legal aid to the poor does not mean poor legal aid: Justice Lalit
The Hindu
He also stressred the need for the active involvement of good lawyers in ensuring quality legal aid to the people in need
Shedding light on the fact that the overwhelming majority of the general public not utilising the free legal aid services due to many reasons including the lack of awareness and poor quality of the aid offered, Justice Uday U. Lalit, Supreme Court Judge and the Executive Chairman of National Legal Services Authority, said that the good quality legal aid must be ensured to make people have faith in the legal aid system.
“Most of us who deserve or the potential beneficiaries of free legal aid is not even aware of their rights. Only 1% of the total criminal cases heard in the courts of law get legal aid from the offices of Legal Services Authorities across the country. Is it that the remaining 99% of the general public doesn’t want legal aid? There could be two reasons for not getting legal aid. One, most of them are even not aware that it is their constitutional right to be provided free legal aid. Second, they don’t perhaps have confidence in the set up of legal aid, which is more dangerous. If they don’t have confidence in the setup or in the machinery of legal aid, then we need to do self-introspection. Good quality aid must be ensured. Legal aid to the poor does not mean poor legal aid. There has to be better standard, better quality and better level [of legal aid offered through legal services authorities].
He was delivering a keynote address at a legal awareness programme titled “Actualisation of Rights and Entitlements in Achieving Sustainable Development Goals - 2030” held at the PDA Engineering College auditorium here on October 24. The programme, which was a part of the pan-India outreach campaign, was organised by District and State Legal Services Authorities.
![](/newspic/picid-1269750-20250217064624.jpg)
When fed into Latin, pusilla comes out denoting “very small”. The Baillon’s crake can be missed in the field, when it is at a distance, as the magnification of the human eye is woefully short of what it takes to pick up this tiny creature. The other factor is the Baillon’s crake’s predisposition to present less of itself: it moves about furtively and slides into the reeds at the slightest suspicion of being noticed. But if you are keen on observing the Baillon’s crake or the ruddy breasted crake in the field, in Chennai, this would be the best time to put in efforts towards that end. These birds live amidst reeds, the bulrushes, which are likely to lose their density now as they would shrivel and go brown, leaving wide gaps, thereby reducing the cover for these tiddly birds to stay inscrutable.