MP HC judge says at farewell that he was ‘transferred with ill intention’

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MP HC judge says at farewell that he was 'transferred with ill intention'



“But the representation was neither considered nor rejected,” he lamented.Another appeal during the tenure of the previous Chief Justice also went unanswered.”I received no response. A judge like me expects at least a humane consideration. I was disheartened and deeply pained,” he added.He acknowledged that current Chief Justice B R Gavai might have been more sympathetic, but it came “too late in the day as I am demitting office.” Justice Ramana expressed his belief that the transfer was executed with “ill intention to harass me.” “Anyway, my transfer order seems to have been issued with ill-intention and to harass me. I suffered as I was transferred from my home state for obvious reasons,” he stated, a veiled reference to unseen forces.”I am happy to satisfy their ego. Now they are retired. God does not forgive nor forget. They will also suffer in another mode,” he added.Despite the bitterness, his speech was not without dignity and resilience.A first-generation lawyer, Justice Ramana reflected on his life: “I bore witness to the resilience of human existence, the power of human struggle, dignity in poverty, and most importantly, unshakable hope and faith.” “These ordinary, everyday experiences” taught him that “except hard work, there is no shortcut to success.”His career, he acknowledged, was marked by “struggles and bitter experiences” that eventually led him to “diversify my activities.” From the moment he joined the judicial service, he was subjected to “conspiratorial scrutiny.” “My family has suffered in silence,” he shared, “But ultimately, the truth will always prevail.” He invoked the words of Martin Luther King Jr.: “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.” Justice Ramana stressed that every achievement in his life came after enduring setbacks and hardships. He embraced these challenges, believing that “every failure carries a seed of equivalent advantage.” “I never claimed to be a scholarly judge or a great judge. But I always believed that the ultimate purpose of the justice delivery system is to provide justice to the common man.”



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