Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Friday, 20 March 2026

Exhausted Bench Reserves Verdict

Exhausted Bench Reserves Verdict

Lede

I write this after reading the terse, candid order from a High Court bench that has quickly become the subject of commentary: after a long day of hearing, the judge recorded that he was “hungry, tired and physically incapacitated to dictate the judgment,” and therefore reserved the verdict in a case that the Supreme Court had expressly asked the High Court to decide urgently. The petition had been remanded for fresh consideration and the six-month window fixed by the Supreme Court was expiring the same day the matter was heard. LiveLaw, India Today and others reported the order.

Background: what the case is and why it was expedited

The litigation began with a challenge to an order passed by a Debts Recovery Tribunal (DRT). A High Court had earlier set aside that DRT order and remanded the matter for a fresh hearing. The respondent challenged that High Court order in the Supreme Court, which found that the borrower/respondent had not been heard and, in effect, revived the petition before the High Court. The Supreme Court asked the High Court to decide the petition "as early as possible and, subject to its convenience, preferably within six months," and fixed timelines to expedite filings. When the matter returned to the High Court, it was listed under the category of “Supreme Court expedited matters” because the six-month window was expiring on the day it was taken up Bar & Bench, Hindustan Times.

The judge’s statement, the courtroom context, and immediate reactions

In open court, after extended argument that began well past ordinary hours, the bench observed the enormous daily board (over 200 matters on the cause list that day) and recorded the timing: the expedited matter was taken up around 4:15 pm and arguments concluded shortly after 7:00 pm. The court then recorded, in its order, the lines that have drawn attention: "Since I am feeling hungry, tired and physically incapacitated to dictate the judgment, the judgment is reserved." (Direct quote from the court record; see reporting in LiveLaw and India Today.)

The courtroom context matters: the cause list that day reportedly ran into the hundreds, with dozens of fresh matters and many regular interlocutory items. Counsel for both sides had argued at length to meet the Supreme Court’s directive and the firm deadline. Reporters present described a subdued atmosphere after the unusual candid note in the order. Lead counsel for the petitioner and for the respondents asked the court to take the matter on board at the earliest convenient date; litigants expressed a mix of frustration and understanding at the practical reality of judicial time constraints.

Legal implications of reserving judgment for the reasons stated

On its face, the bench exercised a normal and perfectly lawful procedural option: a court may reserve judgment after hearing arguments and deliver it later in writing. Reserving judgment is routine when a judge needs time to consider complex points, prepare the written reasons, or consult colleagues on legal nuances. What has sparked debate is the explicit reasoning recorded—hunger, fatigue and physical incapacity—which is unusually candid and human.

Procedurally, reserving judgment does not alter the status of the case: the matter remains pending and the court must pronounce orders in due course. But in the specific procedural frame—an order remitted by the Supreme Court with a six-month admonition to decide expeditiously—there are practical consequences:

  • The bench remains duty-bound to deliver a reasoned decision within a reasonable period; undue delay can invite supervisory orders or directions from the Supreme Court itself.
  • Parties who perceive prejudice from a further delay retain the option of pressing for listed dates, seeking an early pronouncement, or approaching the Supreme Court again on grounds of non-compliance with its directions.

Discussion: judicial conduct, welfare of judges, and court functioning norms

This episode brings two important but distinct issues into focus: (1) how judges record judicial dispositions publicly, and (2) the institutional pressures shaping court functioning.

On judicial conduct: candid notes—especially those that disclose a judge’s physical state—are rare. Judges must, of course, be frank and accurate in records, but many will say the conventional practice has been to record more neutral procedural reasons for reserving judgment (e.g., "for consideration" or "order reserved"). The candid phrasing here has opened a conversation about whether such honesty helps or hinders public confidence in the judiciary.

On judicial welfare and court administration: the larger practical problem is the unsustainable size of cause lists, the backlog of cases, and the mismatch between judicial time and work. Courts routinely sit late, absorb urgent listings, and try to honor higher court directions. Yet the institutional structures—staffing, roster planning, physical facilities, and welfare allowances—are often stretched. If benches are routinely pressed to sit beyond healthy limits to meet expedited deadlines, the system risks compromising deliberative quality and the well-being of judges.

A balanced set of voices (hypothetical)

  • Legal commentator (hypothetical): "The bench’s candour is a wake-up call for better roster management. The law should not be a factory for rushed pronouncements," said a senior commentator (fictional).
  • Court administrator (hypothetical): "Expedited listings by the Supreme Court are necessary in some matters, but they need to be matched by local administrative support—additional court officers, staggered rosters and realistic time slots," commented a court official (fictional).

Comparisons and precedent

Similar episodes—where judges have recorded stress, illness or incapacity as a reason to step back—exist in other jurisdictions. Internationally, courts have mechanisms such as temporary replacement, panel reassignment, or expedited written judgments to deal with unavoidable absences or health constraints. In India too, there have been instances where benches have recused or adjourned citing health, but a recorded line about hunger and physical incapacity remains striking for its plain language. (See contemporary reporting in national outlets for context: Hindustan Times, ThePrint.)

Possible next steps and scenarios

  • The most likely path: the bench will set a date to pronounce the order in writing after suitable deliberation. The judgment may be uploaded and circulated as per practice.
  • If the pronouncement is unreasonably delayed and a party can show prejudice arising from the delay, that party may seek directions from the Supreme Court for expedited pronouncement or other remedial steps.
  • In the rare event that the bench remains unavailable for a prolonged period, administrative reallocation or listing before a co-ordinate bench is possible.

Conclusion and questions for readers

I find this episode a healthy prompt to reflect not only on the human limits of adjudicators but also on institutional design. Courts are public institutions: candour underscores the human element in adjudication, but it also demands practical fixes—better roster management, welfare measures for judges, and systemic attention to how the judiciary discharges urgent, Supreme Court-flagged work.

Questions for readers to reflect on

  • Should judges record personal reasons such as fatigue in court orders, or maintain a more neutral registry of procedural steps?
  • How should higher courts balance urgent directions with the practical capacity of lower benches?
  • What concrete administrative reforms would reduce the frequency of late-night hearings and protect judicial wellness?

Sources and further reading

  • LiveLaw, "Allahabad High Court Judge Reserves Verdict In SC-Expedited Case" (Feb 2026) link
  • India Today, (Feb 2026) link
  • Hindustan Times, (Feb 2026) link
  • Bar & Bench, (Feb 2026) link

Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
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  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
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India Energy stack : Decentralized Energy Market

 




===================================================


Respected Shri Ashwini Vaishnawji,


Warm regards.

I recently studied the emerging framework of the India Energy Stack (IES),

 which envisions a UPI-like Digital Public Infrastructure for the power sector. I

 sincerely compliment the Government for this transformative initiative.


Sir


I wish to respectfully submit that several components now being operationalized

 under IES closely align with conceptual frameworks I had articulated over the

 past six years (2020–2026), across multiple blog publications.



🧠 Prior Conceptual Work (2020–2026)


Between 2020 and 2026, I had outlined a consumer-centric, decentralized

 energy marketplace, with the following key elements:










These ideas collectively envisioned a transition from centralized grids to a

 participatory “energy internet.


🔍 Present Alignment with India Energy Stack


India Energy Stack now provides the foundational infrastructure layer,

enabling:


  • Smart meters and real-time data exchange

  • Interoperable digital systems

  • Integration of distributed renewable energy

This creates a unique opportunity to operationalize the next layer — a

consumer-driven electricity marketplace.


⚡ Key Insight


India Energy Stack = Digital Infrastructure (like UPI rails)


Parekh Model = Marketplace  
Incentive Layer (  like apps on UPI  )




🚀 Proposal  :   Pilot Implementation


I propose a pilot project integrating IES with a P2P electricity marketplace,

incorporating:

1. Consumer Marketplace Layer

  • Mobile app-based buying/selling of surplus electricity

  • Real-time pricing and automated matching

2. Incentive Framework

  • Carbon credit-based rewards (aligned with energy efficiency models like

  •  SEEM 

  • Behavioral nudges to optimize consumption

3. AI Optimization Layer ( IndiaAGI  Vision )

  • Demand-supply forecasting

  • Automated buyer-seller matching

  • Grid load balancing support

4. Governance & Trust Layer

  • Reliability scoring for participants

  • Transparent transaction records

  • DISCOM-supervised settlement


🎯 Strategic Impact

  • Accelerates renewable energy adoption

  • Reduces peak load stress

  • Empowers citizens as energy participants and traders

  • Positions India as the first nation to implement a UPI-like energy

  • marketplace at scale

Sir, 

just as UPI transformed India into a global leader in digital payments,

India Energy Stack can enable India to lead the world in decentralized

energy markets.



Warm regards,


Hemen Parekh


www.HemenParekh.ai / www.YourContentCreator.in / www.IndiaAGI.ai


21 March 2026


==========================================

“PRIOR ART” COMPARISON TABLE

“Parekh Timeline vs India Implementation”

YearParekh Blog / ConceptWhat Was ProposedWhat India is Now Implementing
2020A Tale of Two StatesDigital energy governance, state-driven reformNational digital infra (India Energy Stack)
2024Solar Economy (SETI)Electricity as tradable economic assetEnergy markets + dynamic pricing emerging
2025Shared Community Solar FarmsCollective solar ownership & local gridsCommunity solar & microgrid pilots
2026P2P Electricity TradingConsumer-to-consumer electricity exchangeP2P trading pilots + policy movement
2020–26SEEM + other frameworksIncentives, carbon credits, behavior nudgesCarbon market & efficiency focus growing
2020–26IndiaAGI visionAI-driven matching, forecastingAI beginning in grid optimization

==========================================


Thursday, 19 March 2026

VotesApp : Designed By Claude

 Dear Shri Amitbhai Shah 



Some 13 years back , through my following email , I had suggested that we

change over to mobile based voting for all elactions ( Central + States + Municipal

+ Panchayat ) :


> http://www.hemenparekh.in/2013/08/votesapp.html  ... 18  Dec  2012


Since then, I have sent several reminder mails ( listed below ) 


I believe Election Comission has also made some attempts at mobile based voting

 

Now that we are seriously considering " One Nation , One Election " system, I

believe it is also the most opportune moment to move from Polling Booth based

elections to Mobile based elections


I present below, a very COMPREHENSIVE system design for VotesApp , developed

by Claude.ai


No doubt , this REFORM would require full support of all Political Parties / Election

Commission / Supreme Court / Citizen


I urge you to circulate this mail to all the concerned stakeholders for a public

debate / arriving at a PROCESS CONSENSUS and a TIME FRAME,  before

conducting a PILOT PROJECT in one of the forthcoming State Elections


As a very FIRST STEP , this proposal may be uploaded / published on Election

Commission website and comments invited from citizen


The following chart which shows at a glance, the SAVINGS of Man-hours and

 Money, by implementing VotesApp , would convince all concerned to whole-

heartedly support my suggestion 






with regards,


Hemen Parekh


www.HemenParekh.ai / www.YourContentCreator.in / www.IndiaAGI.ai / 20 March 2026


===================================================

CC : 

Shri Gyanesh Kumar  [  Chief Election Commissioner  /          ]

Hon Chief Justice of India


===================================================

Claude replied :


Great proposal from Hemen Parekh !


The VotesApp idea is ahead of its time — Aadhaar-linked mobile voting with selfie

verification. 

Let me build you a comprehensive system architecture for this.


Here's the full comprehensive breakdown:


Following User Interfaces ( Mobile Screens ) are extremely user-friendly : 



These are the various layers of work-flow :





VotesApp — Complete System Architecture


Software Stack


Mobile (Android / iOS)

  • React Native or Flutter (single codebase for both platforms)
  • Available on: Google Play, App Store, GetJar, EC official site
  • Pre-loaded on government devices (Aakash tablets, future schemes)

Backend Microservices

  • Language: Go (for high concurrency — critical on election day spikes) + Python for AI/ML workloads

  • Framework: gRPC internally, REST + GraphQL for clients

  • Container orchestration: Kubernetes on NIC's MeghRaj sovereign cloud


Databases

  • Voter registry: PostgreSQL with HA replication (never loses a row)

  • Vote ledger: Permissioned blockchain (Hyperledger Fabric) — append-only, immutable, auditable

  • Sessions / OTP: Redis Cluster

  • Selfie hashes: Object store (S3-compatible) — faces never stored raw, only cryptographic hashes


Security

  • End-to-end encryption: Ballots encrypted with ElGamal / homomorphic encryption so votes can be tallied without decrypting individual votes

  • Zero-knowledge proofs: Voter can verify their vote was counted without revealing who they voted for

  • Hardware Security Modules (HSM): All keys managed in HSM — tally keys split among EC officials (multi-party threshold)

  • TLS 1.3 on all transport


AI / Face Match

  • Selfie liveness detection (prevents photos of photos)

  • Face matching against Aadhaar ABIS (Automated Biometric Identification System) via UIDAI API

  • On-device preprocessing → cloud match (selfie never stored post-match)


Key Design Decisions aligned with Hemen Parekh's proposal


Proposal FeatureImplementation

Aadhaar-linked registration
UIDAI API with demographic + biometric verification

Mobile number binding

Telecom API + OTP; vote only castable from registered SIM

Underage prevention

Date of birth verified via Aadhaar — server-enforced, not just UI

Selfie match (2015 addition)

Liveness check + ABIS face match at both registration AND vote time

One vote only

Vote ledger checks voter ID before accepting — app hard-locked after

Physical booth exclusion

EC voter rolls updated in real-time; polling officer app cross-checks

Long-press candidate details

Candidate assets/criminal record pulled from EC affidavit API

NOTA option

Fully supported in ballot UI

Booth capture impossible

No physical location — attack surface is cryptographic, not physical


Scale Planning (election day)


900M+ eligible voters; 

peak concurrency could hit 50M+ votes/hour. 

The architecture handles this via: horizontal pod autoscaling on Kubernetes, Redis

caching for candidate lists, async vote processing via message queues (Kafka),

and CDN edge nodes for static assets. Vote casting itself is sub-100ms — the

blockchain write happens asynchronously after the voter gets their confirmation.


==============================================

My Past Emails on this matter :


Harmonising India's Elections  ..  02 March 2026




























=======================================================================
Ref :








Hidden Hub Revealed

Hidden Hub Revealed

Introduction

I’ve spent years watching small, quiet interventions ripple into big changes. In my work and writing I keep returning to one idea: many rural transformations start not with grand projects but with a modest, well-placed hub — a physical and digital meeting point that stitches services, knowledge and markets together. In this post I call that node the “hidden hub” and explain why it is quietly reshaping rural livelihoods.

What is the hidden hub?

A hidden hub is a locally rooted, multipurpose centre — sometimes physical, often "phygital" (physically present and digitally enabled) — where people access information, training, market links, financial services and social support in one place. Think of it as a one-stop neighbourhood platform that combines know-how, connections and basic infrastructure.

This model is not hypothetical. Researchers and practitioners label similar entities as Rural Development Hubs or Digital/Village Hubs (Aspen Institute report; FAO’s Digital Villages work) and show how compact, flexible hubs can catalyse systems-level change rather than short-term fixes.

How it operates

Hidden hubs work through a few simple, repeatable mechanics:

  • Convening: they bring diverse stakeholders together — farmers, youth, local administrators, service providers — in an accessible space.
  • Aggregation of services: extension advice, skilling, e-governance, fintech and market information co-exist under one roof or platform.
  • Intermediation: hub staff or local entrepreneurs act as interpreters of technology and policy for villagers, lowering adoption barriers.
  • Market linkages: hubs aggregate supply and negotiate better terms with buyers, logistics providers or input suppliers.
  • Learning loops: data and feedback from the hub inform continuous improvement and local decision-making.

Practical examples include digitally-enabled Youth Hubs that connect rural youth to jobs and entrepreneurship pathways (GOYN case study) and digital village initiatives that provide telehealth, e-extension and market platforms (FAO’s Digital Villages). My earlier commentary about digital Common Service Centers also highlighted this principle — bundling services improves reach and value for rural users (my post on Common Service Centers going Digital).

Impacts on livelihoods

When a hub functions well, its effects stack up quickly:

  • Increased incomes: better market information and collective marketing improve prices; targeted training increases yields or value-addition.
  • Diversification: access to new skills and microfinance reduces dependence on seasonal agriculture and creates off-farm jobs.
  • Inclusion: hubs can be deliberately designed to reach women, youth and marginalized groups through safe spaces and tailored programming.
  • Resilience: hubs aggregate risk management tools (weather advisories, crop insurance links, savings groups) that stabilize incomes.

Evidence from multiple initiatives shows impressive outcomes: Youth Hubs in rural India recorded thousands of youth placed in jobs or supported to start businesses; digital agriculture pilots have improved adoption rates and productivity when combined with community-driven demonstration and training (see World Bank and Digital Green work on decentralized digital libraries and video-based extension).

Challenges and practical solutions

Hidden hubs are powerful but not magic. Common challenges include:

  • Financial sustainability: donor funding can seed hubs, but sustainability requires diversified revenue (service fees, anchor tenants like schools, local government contracts).
  • Trust and governance: hubs must be accountable to the community; co-design and local governance boards help.
  • Digital access and skills: connectivity and device access remain uneven. A phased model — human intermediaries plus low-bandwidth services (SMS/voice) — widens reach.
  • Fragmentation of services: without coordination, multiple single-purpose efforts can compete. Hubs succeed when they focus on local priorities and knit partners together.

Practical fixes I’ve seen work:

  • Start small and modular: pilot a few services, prove impact, then scale.
  • Invest in local intermediary roles (hub managers, digital entrepreneurs) who bridge technology and people.
  • Structure public–private partnerships so the public sector anchors core services while private actors add market-driven value.
  • Measure outcomes that matter locally (income stability, number of households accessing services), not just outputs.

Future outlook

Over the next decade hidden hubs can shift from pilots to the backbone of rural service delivery. Advances in low-cost connectivity, richer open-data platforms and affordable local entrepreneurship models make hubs more viable at scale. But scale must remain context-sensitive: hubs will look different across regions — some primarily digital platforms, others cooperative-managed physical centres.

Policy choices will matter. When governments recognize hubs as legitimate delivery partners and align procurement, training and social programs, the pace of change accelerates (the Aspen and FAO literature point to the catalytic role of enabling policy). My own early writings on bridging digital divides and Common Service Centers pointed to this same policy imperative: technology must be anchored in local institutions to deliver durable change.

Conclusion

Hidden hubs are not glamorous. They’re simple, often invisible architectures of connection — a chair, a computer, a facilitator and a network. Yet they are where ideas meet markets, knowledge meets practice, and resilience is built. If we want rural livelihoods to move beyond survival toward dignity and choice, the hub model deserves more attention, more patient funding and more trust in local leadership.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the essential services a rural development hub must provide to effectively improve livelihoods?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




Interested in having your LinkedIn profile featured here?

Submit a request.
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