Border row: Karnataka spends ₹60 lakh daily on legal fee

Update: 2023-01-24 10:18 GMT
Agitators in support of Belagavi remaining with Karnataka. Pic: File photo

The Karnataka government has fixed a professional fee of ₹59.9 lakh per day for the senior lawyers, including Mukul Rohatgi to fight the border row case with Maharashtra in the Supreme Court.

A law department order said it had fixed the terms and conditions and professional fee of the legal team to represent Karnataka before the Supreme Court in an original suit (number 4/2004) filed by the government of Maharashtra against Karnataka on the border dispute.

Also read: Border row: Amit Shah asks Karnataka, Maharashtra to form ministerial team

As per the January 18 order, senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi will be paid ₹22 lakh per day for appearing before the apex court and ₹5.5 lakh per day for conference and other works.
Another lawyer Shyam Divan will be paid ₹6 lakh a day for appearing before the court, ₹1.5 lakh per day for preparation of the case and other works and ₹10 lakh for outstation visits per day. The government will bear the expenses for hotel facilities and business class air travel.

The advocate general of Karnataka will be paid ₹3 lakh a day for appearing in the SC, ₹1.25 lakh per day for preparing cases and other works, ₹2 lakh on outstation visits apart from bearing the hotel and business class air travel expenditures.

The state government has also hired senior lawyer Uday Holla, a former advocate general of Karnataka, who will be paid ₹2 lakh per day for appearing in the apex court, ₹75,000 per day for preparation of the case, ₹1.5 lakh per day for settlement of pleadings and other works, and ₹1.5 lakh per day for outstation visits apart from hotel and travel expenses.

The boundary row had intensified late last year, with vehicles from either side being targeted, leaders from Maharashtra and Karnataka weighing in, and pro-Kannada and Marathi activists being detained by police amid a tense atmosphere in Belagavi.

Also read: Law, politics, emotions: Karnataka-Maharashtra’s 8-decade Belagavi row

The border issue dates back to 1957 after the reorganisation of states on linguistic lines. Maharashtra laid claim to Belagavi, which was part of the erstwhile Bombay Presidency, as it has a sizeable Marathi-speaking population. It also laid claim to over 800 Marathi-speaking villages which are currently part of Karnataka.

Karnataka maintains that the demarcation done on linguistic lines as per the States Reorganisation Act and the 1967 Mahajan Commission Report as final. Further, to drive home the fact that Belagavi is an integral part of the state, Karnataka has built the Suvarna Vidhana Soudha, modelled on the Vidhana Soudha here.

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