Supreme Court, Justice DY Chandrachud 
News

Working on making transcripts of court proceedings available in regional languages: CJI DY Chandrachud

The CJI was responding to Senior Advocate Rakesh Dwivedi, who raised the concern that since court proceedings are conducted in English, people in some regions may not be able to understand them

Debayan Roy

Chief Justice of India (CJI) DY Chandrachud on Tuesday said that the Supreme Court is working on making transcripts of court proceedings available in regional languages.

During the eighth day of hearing of the same-sex marriage case, the CJI remarked that live streaming of court proceedings has taken court proceedings to the hearts and homes of the people.

However, Senior Advocate Rakesh Dwivedi raised the concern that since court proceedings are in English, people conversant in vernacular languages may not be able to understand them.

The CJI acknowledged this concern and assured that the Supreme Court is working on making transcripts available in regional languages immediately.

"Supreme court is not lost to it, and we are working on making the transcript available in regional languages immediately," he said.

The Supreme Court on February 21 this year began using Artificial Intelligence (AI) and technology driven by Natural Language Processing for live transcription of its hearings in Constitution Bench cases.

In the CJI's courtroom, a screen displaying the live transcript of court proceedings has been placed facing the lawyers. The transcripts are uploaded on the Court's website as well.

The transcription service is being done by TERES, a company which has been providing this facility to arbitration practitioners.

Karnataka High Court sits on Sunday to hear plea seeking permission for RSS route march, asks State to decide

Internship: A comedy of errors

Allahabad High Court reunites interfaith couple, pulls up UP police for their unlawful detention

Kerala High Court helps drug addict NDPS accused secure college admission; pays his course fee

NLU Consortium expert committee invites public comments for CLAT 2027

SCROLL FOR NEXT