New Delhi: The Bar Council of India (BCI) has told the Supreme Court that it has earmarked about 500 law colleges throughout the country which are sub-standard/below standard and a team led by some former judges/senior advocates and others plans to conduct surprise visits of such establishments and in case of any deficiencies, steps would be taken for their closure. In an affidavit filed in a matter related to reforms in legal education and placements of young lawyers, the BCI said that it is constituting a high powered committee that would look into the issue of compulsory chamber placement of five juniors by senior advocates or advocates having 25 years of standing at the Bar.
The council said it is proposed that the legal education committee of the BCI and the advisory board would consider introducing a State Level Entrance Test for admissions to law colleges in its next meeting. It said, the appellant (BCI) has earmarked about 500 institutions throughout the country who are sub-standard/below standard and a team led by some former judges/senior advocates, noted academicians and plans to conduct surprise visits of such institutions and if any institution is found to be below standard, having neither the sufficient faculties nor infrastructure then the Legal Education Committee shall take immediate step to close such institutions''.
The BCI said that it is not an executive body and relies upon the universities to close such colleges and/or upon the government to close such universities which despite the requests have been casual on the use of unfair means in LLB/LLM exams and awarding the LLD. Thus as a last resolve the BCI is considering withdrawing the approval granted for running courses of legal education to such university, it said and pointed out a slew of difficulties faced by the council in regulating legal education across the country.
It said that almost 90 per cent of the government-run colleges/institutions have an acute dearth of infrastructure and faculty, many unfilled vacancies last 15-20 years, and in spite of requests/warning the state governments/Universities are not serious in this regard. The standard of the legal profession has a direct bearing with the standard of law teaching and it was because of this reason that the council proposed to scrap the system of one year LLM course because one LLM was/is proved to be only an ornamental degree. In fact, It was/is not even one year, rather it is only a nine months course, it said. The BCI said that in India it is most unfortunate that only a few universities show a keen interest in the research works in the field of legal education, which is in fact most ignored and neglected.