Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant on Friday declared Sikkim as the country’s first fully paperless State judiciary, marking a decisive shift in court administration and adjudicatory processes towards a digitised, technology-driven framework.
Attending the national conclave on technology and judicial education in Gangtok, the CJI said that the digitisation drive promoted institutional accountability, strengthened transparency and aligned with the broader objectives of judicial reforms under the e-Courts project. He further noted that the initiative played a critical role in advancing the principles of access to justice by eliminating logistical barriers, optimising adjudicatory time and enhancing procedural efficiency.
The development coincides with Sikkim’s 50th Statehood anniversary, lending both constitutional significance and institutional symbolism to the initiative, which seeks to overhaul the justice delivery mechanism through digital integration and systemic process re-engineering.
The transition entails a complete migration from physical records to an end-to-end electronic ecosystem, incorporating e-filing systems, virtual case flow management, digitised judicial archives, and automated court workflows. The reform is designed to ensure procedural compliance with statutory timelines, improve case management efficiency and enable seamless retrieval of records across judicial forums.
The paperless regime is expected to reduce case pendency through expedited hearings, minimise administrative inefficiencies, and provide real-time, remote access to case files for litigants, members of the Bar, and judicial officers, thereby strengthening the principles of open justice and procedural due process.
The two-day conclave at Chintan Bhawan saw participation from key judicial stakeholders, including Chief Minister Prem Singh Tamang; Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Seychelles, Justice Rony James Govinden; judge of the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, Mohammad Dhilip Nawaz Abdul Hameed; along with judges of the Supreme Court and High Courts across the country.
Discussions during the conclave focused on the integration of legal technology, the deployment of artificial intelligence in judicial functions and the evolution of digital pedagogy in judicial training. The Sikkim model is expected to serve as a benchmark for replication across states, as the Indian judiciary accelerates its transition towards a fully digitised ecosystem with reduced reliance on paper-based documentation and a greater emphasis on efficiency and sustainability in court administration.
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