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    <title>2003 (8) TMI 581 - Supreme Court</title>
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    <description>Judicial review under Articles 226, 227 and 32 is ordinarily exercised after the alternative remedy before the Tribunal is pursued, but exceptional factual circumstances may justify direct writ intervention where the Tribunal cannot grant effective relief in time. The Court found such extraordinary conditions here and treated the writ petitions as maintainable. It also reaffirmed that Government employees have no fundamental, statutory, moral, or equitable right to strike, since conduct rules prohibit strikes and public-sector strikes undermine administration and public welfare. The connected matters were disposed of with consequential directions for reinstatement and further administrative consideration.</description>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 06 Aug 2003 00:00:00 +0530</pubDate>
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      <title>2003 (8) TMI 581 - Supreme Court</title>
      <link>https://www.taxtmi.com/caselaws?id=302798</link>
      <description>Judicial review under Articles 226, 227 and 32 is ordinarily exercised after the alternative remedy before the Tribunal is pursued, but exceptional factual circumstances may justify direct writ intervention where the Tribunal cannot grant effective relief in time. The Court found such extraordinary conditions here and treated the writ petitions as maintainable. It also reaffirmed that Government employees have no fundamental, statutory, moral, or equitable right to strike, since conduct rules prohibit strikes and public-sector strikes undermine administration and public welfare. The connected matters were disposed of with consequential directions for reinstatement and further administrative consideration.</description>
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