Tue, 16 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 16, 2026 · 08:06
Haryana News Updated Jun 16, 2026

Haryana Achieves 100% E-Court Summons Generation Milestone

Haryana has achieved 100% electronic generation of court summons and over 90% consumption of e-charge sheets under new criminal laws. The state has secured the number one position on the National New Criminal Laws Dashboard since June 7. Chief Secretary Anurag Rastogi chaired the 33rd State Apex Committee meeting reviewing CCTNS and ICJS initiatives. The committee directed all stakeholders to sustain momentum and leverage technology for efficient policing and justice delivery.

Haryana generating 100 per cent e-court summons

Chandigarh, June 15

Haryana has achieved a significant milestone in the modernisation of its criminal justice system with 100 per cent electronic generation of court summons and more than 90 per cent consumption of e-charge sheets under the new criminal laws.

The achievements were highlighted at the 33rd State Apex Committee (SAC) meeting on Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems and Interoperable Criminal Justice System, chaired by Chief Secretary Anurag Rastogi on Monday.

The meeting reviewed the implementation of the new criminal laws, CCTNS and ICJS initiatives.

Director General of Police (DGP) Ajay Singhal said Haryana has secured the number one position on the National New Criminal Laws Dashboard since June 7 and has remained at the top 44 times during the past 59 months since June 2021. The state had also secured the first position on the Pragati Dashboard in April 2026.

The committee was informed that Haryana Police continued to deliver exemplary citizen-centric services, maintaining a perfect 10 out of 10 score on the Right to Service (RTS) Dashboard through the HarSamay portal. More than 88.84 lakh citizen applications have been disposed of within prescribed timelines, making Haryana Police one of the state's best-performing departments in public service delivery.

Chief Secretary Rastogi appreciated the outstanding performance of the department and directed all stakeholders to sustain the momentum, ensure the timely implementation of pending projects and continue leveraging technology to make policing, investigation and justice delivery more efficient, transparent and citizen-friendly.

Reviewing judicial integration initiatives, the committee noted that all court summons are now being generated electronically through the court information system (CIS), marking a major step towards a paperless justice ecosystem.

The successful integration of police and court systems has also resulted in e-charge sheet acceptance crossing the 90 per cent mark under the new criminal laws, significantly improving efficiency and transparency in criminal investigations and prosecutions.

A major focus of the meeting was the ongoing modernisation of police infrastructure under ICJS 2.0. Procurement and deployment of advanced technology equipment, including high-end desktop computers, UPS systems, multi-function printers, QR-code readers and printers, video conferencing endpoints and LED display systems, are being pursued to strengthen digital policing and seamless information sharing among police, prisons, prosecution, forensic science laboratories and courts.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Ravi K

Wait, this is impressive but I have to ask — is the rural population actually able to access these e-summons? Internet connectivity in villages is still patchy. Hope they've kept offline alternatives too.

James A

As someone working in legal tech, this is exactly the kind of digital transformation India needs. 100% e-summons is not easy — great to see Haryana leading. Now if only other states could catch up!

Varun X

Impressive numbers — 88 lakh citizen applications disposed on time! But I'm skeptical about the "perfect 10 on RTS Dashboard". In my experience, government dashboards sometimes paint a rosier picture than ground reality. Still, progress is progress. 🤷‍♂️

Sarah B

Love this! Paperless justice is the future. I remember when my uncle had to travel 50 km just to collect a court notice. This will save so much time and money for ordinary people. Well done, Haryana!

Deepak U

All good but what about cybersecurity? If court summons and charge sheets are going fully digital, we need robust systems to prevent hacking or data leaks. Hope the government is investing in that too. 🤔

Arjun K

As a lawyer practicing in Chandigarh, I can confirm this is

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked