Calcutta High Court to remain closed between July 10 and 13
Jul 9, 2020, 16:40 IST
- The Chief Justice has suspended judicial and administrative works of the Calcutta High Court from July 10 to 13 on account of a new phase of lockdown in the city declaring considerable part of it as containment zones, Registrar General Rai Chattopadhyay said in a notification on Thursday.
- A thorough sanitisation process in the three buildings of the high court will also be conducted during this period, she said.
- The high court had reopened its doors for physical hearing of cases on June 11 after a gap of over two and half months as normal functioning was stopped owing to the lockdown.
Advertisement
The Calcutta High Court will remain closed from Friday to Monday due to imposition of a fresh spell of lockdown in containment zones of the city and for sanitisation of the court buildings, its Registrar General said.
The Chief Justice has suspended judicial and administrative works of the Calcutta High Court from July 10 to 13 on account of a new phase of lockdown in the city declaring considerable part of it as containment zones, Registrar General Rai Chattopadhyay said in a notification on Thursday.
A thorough sanitisation process in the three buildings of the high court will also be conducted during this period, she said.
The high court had reopened its doors for physical hearing of cases on June 11 after a gap of over two and half months as normal functioning was stopped owing to the lockdown.
It had been taking up only very urgent matters through video conference hearings.
Advertisement
The West Bengal government had on Tuesday decided to expand the areas under lockdown and impose tougher restrictions from 5 pm on July 9 to stem the spike in COVID-19 cases.
SEE ALSO:
INTERVIEW: Shaaz Jung opens up about the blood, sweat and years behind the viral images of a rare black panther
Harvard, MIT, and Northeastern University are suing ICE to block its order forcing international students to leave the US if their course is online-only
Russian scammers are conning senior executives into giving away $2.7 million by impersonating real CEOs and lawyers