Latest news with #RoR


Hans India
a day ago
- Politics
- Hans India
Swift action sought on SC/ST cases
Bhongir: The SC/ST Commission Chairman, Bakki Venkataiah, has directed officials to resolve all pending cases related to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes across various departments. On Saturday, he conducted a review meeting at the Collectorate Conference Hall in Yadadri-Bhongir district, along with Collector Hanumantha Rao, DCP Akshansh Yadav, and Commission members. The Chairman proposed holding a Civil Rights Day on the last Saturday of every month, involving tahsildars and police officers to address village-level grievances. He instructed the formation of a quarterly DVMC (District Vigilance & Monitoring Committee) to ensure inter-departmental coordination in resolving SC/ST-related concerns. The Commission chief stressed strict adherence to the Rule of Reservation (RoR) in promotions and warned of disciplinary action for violations. Earlier, the Chairman visited the under-construction Ambedkar Bhavan in Singannagudem and urged speedy completion. He paid floral tributes to Dr BR Ambedkar and Babu Jagjivan Ram statues in Bhongir town. Public petitions were accepted directly by the Chairman.


New Indian Express
3 days ago
- Politics
- New Indian Express
Orissa High Court issues notice to SJTA on Patabola Seva row
CUTTACK: The Orissa High Court has issued notice to the chief administrator of Shree Jagannath Temple Administration (SJTA) in response to a petition challenging its decision to allowing two persons, who are not descendants of original Record of Rights (RoR) holders to perform the sacred Patabola Seva at the 12th century shrine in Puri. Justice RK Pattanaik issued the notice on Wednesday on the petition filed by Santosh Kumar Patra and seven others seeking the court's intervention against the order issued by the chief administrator on June 12, 2025. The petitioners claimed they are Patara Bishoyi Sevaks and descendants of the original RoR holders, who were specifically assigned to look after the Patabola Seva in the temple. According to the petition, Patabola Seva is a ritual service traditionally reserved for hereditary sevaks. It is a sacred secret service whose knowledge is transferred from generation to generation, and the outsiders have no scope to acquire such knowledge. Sevak means any person who is recorded as such in RoRs. During the hearing, advocate Avijit Patnaik, representing the petitioners, argued that allowing the two persons to take part in the Patabola Seva is contrary to section I21 (2) (1) of the Shree Jagannath Temple Act, 1955. The temple administration has encroached upon the religious practice and rights of sevaks, Patnaik contended. In the order on Wednesday, Justice Pattanaik said, 'Considering the facts pleaded on record and plea advanced by the petitioners, the court is inclined to have the response of Shree Jagannath Temple Administration in particular.' The judge issued notice to chief administrator and directed to list the matter on June 25.


New Indian Express
5 days ago
- Politics
- New Indian Express
Odisha government forms panel to finalise RoR for Lingaraj Temple
BHUBANESWAR: In a bid to resolve the frequent strife between servitor groups of Lingaraj Temple over ownership of rituals, the state government has constituted a two-member committee to review and finalise the Record of Rights (RoR) of the 11th century shrine. The committee, headed by retired judge of Orissa High Court Durga Prasanna Choudhury with Sanskrit professor Prafulla Kumar Mishra as the member, met for the first time on Tuesday. Choudhury said the committee will interact with all the servitors under various nijogs of the shrine, check their legal documents of rights over rituals and also study the existing scriptures and the precedence as far as rituals are concerned. It will submit a report on reorganisation and preparation of a final RoR to the state government. The Law department had in May this year directed formation of such a committee in wake of frequent disruptions in rituals of Lord Lingaraj due to disputes between servitor groups. In January this year, Lord Lingaraj had remained hungry for over 24 hours after a dispute erupted between the Mahasuara and Badu servitors over the conduct of the 'Ghruta Kamala Lagi' ritual on Makar Sankranti.


Time of India
06-06-2025
- Business
- Time of India
Odisha HC junks plea against LIC over public auction of cancelled flat allotments
CUTTACK : Orissa high court has given a clean chit to Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) for reinitiating, through public auction, the sale of flats which were first allotted to policyholders through a draw of lots, and subsequently cancelled in 2014. A petition was filed by a policyholder who had deposited Rs 1 lakh and was among the successful applicants in the draw of lots, before the allotments were cancelled. The petition sought HC's intervention, alleging that LIC is now attempting to profit from the same flats by hiking its cost to Rs 80.54 lakh from the earlier Rs 58.10 lakh, which amounts to arbitrary and exploitative conduct unbecoming of a state entity. While dismissing the plea, Justice S K Panigrahi said the court cannot ignore the practical realities of urban development, land classification, and escalating construction costs. "It is not open to a writ court (HC) to freeze pricing or enforce historic transactions when the statutory and legal framework has significantly changed over a decade," Justice Panigrahi stated in the judgment uploaded on May 29. He pointed out that LIC, being a public authority, is entitled to re-value and dispose of its assets in a lawful, transparent manner, and "no mala fide can be imputed to its decision to conduct an e-auction in 2025." According to case records, in early 2014, LIC had launched a housing scheme for the allotment of 75 flats at Jeevan Bima Nagar, Phase-II, Chandrasekharpur in Bhubaneswar . Policyholders could submit applications depositing Rs 1 Lakh. LIC, on its part, submitted that the cancellation of allotment was compelled by the govt's instruction not to register flats without Record of Rights (RoR). The ROR was unavailable in 2014 and was only obtained in 2024, after due mutation and reclassification of land. After obtaining legal possession and clearances, LIC reinitiated the sale through public auction as required for fair disposal. Given the time lapse and cost escalation, the current pricing reflects present-day market and construction realities, it stated. While dismissing the petition, Justice Panigrahi also ruled that without a sale agreement, registration, or part-performance beyond a token application fee, no enforceable legal right is vested in the petitioner. Justice Panigrahi further clarified that the HC does not sit to enforce broken promises, expectations, or incomplete transactions between private parties and state instrumentalities unless a public duty, statutory violation, or glaring arbitrariness is demonstrably shown.


Time of India
05-06-2025
- Business
- Time of India
HC junks plea against LIC over public auction of cancelled flat allotments
Cuttack: Orissa high court has given a clean chit to Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) for reinitiating, through public auction, the sale of flats which were first allotted to policyholders through a draw of lots, and subsequently cancelled in 2014. A petition was filed by a policyholder who had deposited Rs 1 lakh and was among the successful applicants in the draw of lots, before the allotments were cancelled. The petition sought HC's intervention, alleging that LIC is now attempting to profit from the same flats by hiking its cost to Rs 80.54 lakh from the earlier Rs 58.10 lakh, which amounts to arbitrary and exploitative conduct unbecoming of a state entity. While dismissing the plea, Justice S K Panigrahi said the court cannot ignore the practical realities of urban development, land classification, and escalating construction costs. "It is not open to a writ court (HC) to freeze pricing or enforce historic transactions when the statutory and legal framework has significantly changed over a decade," Justice Panigrahi stated in the judgment uploaded on May 29. He pointed out that LIC, being a public authority, is entitled to re-value and dispose of its assets in a lawful, transparent manner, and "no mala fide can be imputed to its decision to conduct an e-auction in 2025." According to case records, in early 2014, LIC had launched a housing scheme for the allotment of 75 flats at Jeevan Bima Nagar, Phase-II, Chandrasekharpur in Bhubaneswar. Policyholders could submit applications depositing Rs 1 Lakh. LIC, on its part, submitted that the cancellation of allotment was compelled by the govt's instruction not to register flats without Record of Rights (RoR). The ROR was unavailable in 2014 and was only obtained in 2024, after due mutation and reclassification of land. After obtaining legal possession and clearances, LIC reinitiated the sale through public auction as required for fair disposal. Given the time lapse and cost escalation, the current pricing reflects present-day market and construction realities, it stated. While dismissing the petition, Justice Panigrahi also ruled that without a sale agreement, registration, or part-performance beyond a token application fee, no enforceable legal right is vested in the petitioner. Justice Panigrahi further clarified that the HC does not sit to enforce broken promises, expectations, or incomplete transactions between private parties and state instrumentalities unless a public duty, statutory violation, or glaring arbitrariness is demonstrably shown.