NEW DELHI, Dec 24:
Food and Consumer Affairs Minister Piyush Goyal on Saturday launched a host of new initiatives, including the right to repair portal and an NTH mobile app and opened new premises of National Consumer Helpline centre in the national capital.
A memorandum of understanding was also signed between the Consumer Affairs Department and IIT (BHU), Varanasi as well launched a capacity building programme of consumer commissions.
These initiatives were launched on the occasion of the National Consumer Day. Minister of State for Food and Consumer Affairs Sadhvi Niranjan Jyothi, Consumer Affairs Secretary Rohit Kumar Singh, National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) President R K Agrawal were also present at the event.
On the ‘right to repair’ portal, manufacturers will share the manual of product details with customers so that they can either repair by self, by third parties, rather than depend on original manufacturers. Initially, mobile phones, electronic, consumer durables, autombile and farming equipments will be covered.
“I think action speaks more than words. The Department of Consumer Affairs was not so much in limelight …..And suddenly it has found life in their workings,” Goyal said after the launch.
Speaking on the theme “Effective disposal of cases in consumer commission” on the occasion of National Consumer Day, the minister lauded the consumer courts for disposing of higher number of pending cases in last six months and expressed confidence of eliminating the backlog of cases across the country.
“In a short span of six months, we have doubled disposal of pending cases. About 90,000 pending cases were disposed (between July and November this year),” he said. About 38,000 pending cases were disposed of by consumer courts in the year-ago period.
Goyal said there will be ramp up in the disposal of pending cases and elimination of the backlog in the days to come.
He said his ministry is making efforts keeping in mind what the prime minister has articulated — convergency, capacity building and climate change — to make consumers’ life easier and promote ease of doing business.
Minister of State for Food and Consumer Affairs Sadhvi Niranjan Jyothi said it is a good sign that the pendency of consumer cases are reducing which gives confidence to consumers that they will get justice.
Under the Consumer Protection law, a complaint is required to be disposed of within 90 days of its filing and within 150 days wherever expert evidence is required to be taken.
NCDRC President R K Agrawal said, “No one expects a case to be decided overnight. However, difficulty arises when the actual time take for disposal of the case far exceeds its expected life span and a question is raised about the efficacy and efficiency of consumer commissions.”
When the law mandates quick disposal of cases, several years of delay in in deciding the cases always puts a “stigma” on he object for which the commissions were established in the 1986 act, he said, adding that there is a need to look into reasons for the delay.
Agrawal said the disposal rate of complaints in the consumer commissions has been on an average of 89 per cent. Since inception of consumer commissions, there is still a backlog of 6.24 lakh cases as on December 16.
This “reveals that the consumer commissions have not been able to meet the expectations of the consumers and have in fact been under severe strain to fullfill the objectives for which they were enacted,” he said.
The Covid-19 pandemic, rise in cases owing increased consumer awareness, non-functioning of consumer commissions, lack of infrastructure, resource manpower and funds, unnecessary adjournments, scope of multiple appeal — are some of the reasons behind huge backlog of cases, he said. (PTI)