Justice Hosbet Suresh
According to him, people who have a strong but strong philosophy lose contact with many, but after death, the philosophy of such people remains as an ideal. Retired Justice Hosbet Suresh was one of such persons. In the last three decades, he has often been dismissed as a 'human rights activist'. Be aware of what basic and natural human rights are, how injustice is caused by social structure, and what policies of the government can eliminate this injustice. Suresh had it and he gave it to many.
After graduating from the University of Mumbai with a degree in Law, he started his career as an Assistant Advocate in the Sessions Court in 1953. He held the posts of Additional Sessions Judge in the Sessions Court from November 1968 and Second Additional Chief Justice in 1979, but left the post in 1980 to advocate in the High Court. He served in the Mumbai High Court as an Additional Judge from 1986 and as a Permanent Judge from 1987 to 1991. Judging by the principle that "there is no difference between human rights and constitutional fundamental rights", many advocates have stated that instead of giving "equal opportunities to both sides", they are working on recognizing which side of human rights.
In the post-retirement period, when new, 'advanced' forms of sectarianism began to appear in the country since 1992, he accurately exposed the nature of injustice against the minority community. From the 1993 Mumbai riots to the 2002 Gujarat riots, he chaired a number of public inquiry committees and directed these inquiries to the seriousness of the judiciary. When the Karnataka-Tamil Nadu Cauvery water-sharing conflict simmered, a pro-people inquiry committee was appointed. Take it. Suresh was. He was born in Hosbet village, Mangalore, Karnataka. But in the report, he pointed out the mistakes of the Karnataka government. Even before the argument started, "Speak about the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in the Delhi area, which was pro-Congress," he had also criticized the 1984 Shirkana. As a leading figure in human rights and justice movements, he pointed to injustices in many parts of the country. Just as the study of the provisions of the law, the provisions of the Constitution, the jurisprudence that comes from the judicial process, so do the activists in the judiciary who are aware of the social situation. Hosbet Suresh's name will always be mentioned.
After graduating from the University of Mumbai with a degree in Law, he started his career as an Assistant Advocate in the Sessions Court in 1953. He held the posts of Additional Sessions Judge in the Sessions Court from November 1968 and Second Additional Chief Justice in 1979, but left the post in 1980 to advocate in the High Court. He served in the Mumbai High Court as an Additional Judge from 1986 and as a Permanent Judge from 1987 to 1991. Judging by the principle that "there is no difference between human rights and constitutional fundamental rights", many advocates have stated that instead of giving "equal opportunities to both sides", they are working on recognizing which side of human rights.
In the post-retirement period, when new, 'advanced' forms of sectarianism began to appear in the country since 1992, he accurately exposed the nature of injustice against the minority community. From the 1993 Mumbai riots to the 2002 Gujarat riots, he chaired a number of public inquiry committees and directed these inquiries to the seriousness of the judiciary. When the Karnataka-Tamil Nadu Cauvery water-sharing conflict simmered, a pro-people inquiry committee was appointed. Take it. Suresh was. He was born in Hosbet village, Mangalore, Karnataka. But in the report, he pointed out the mistakes of the Karnataka government. Even before the argument started, "Speak about the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in the Delhi area, which was pro-Congress," he had also criticized the 1984 Shirkana. As a leading figure in human rights and justice movements, he pointed to injustices in many parts of the country. Just as the study of the provisions of the law, the provisions of the Constitution, the jurisprudence that comes from the judicial process, so do the activists in the judiciary who are aware of the social situation. Hosbet Suresh's name will always be mentioned.

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