English to Gujarati Dictionary tribunal

tribunal

પંચ
definition
noun
an international war crimes tribunal
a court of justice.
translation of 'tribunal'
પંચ,
ન્યાયપંચ
example
an international war crimes 'tribunal'
We should devise a system that draws on both national courts and an international 'tribunal' .
an international war crimes 'tribunal'
This may be a court (other than the superior courts), 'tribunal' or other public authority.
Amending legislation may also be necessary if the 'tribunal' loses an expected Supreme Court appeal.
an industrial 'tribunal' ruled that he was unfairly dismissed
In the judicial branch the Supreme Court of Justice is the highest 'tribunal' .
Employers' organisations also challenged the power of the Commonwealth 'tribunal' in the High Court.
One sees, of course, that there are sometimes decisions of the International Court and of 'tribunals' and they have a greater status.
In such cases, trial court judgments may be reviewed by appellate 'tribunals' , with the Supreme Court having final judgment.
These 'tribunals' are essential kangaroo courts.
Some commentators have also expressed scepticism about the international courts, 'tribunals' and committees which pronounce upon human rights.
It is encouraging that various instruments, including war crimes 'tribunals' and the International Court of Justice, have been put in place to address and redress past wrongs.
In practice there seems no good reason why the present approach of handling environment-related cases within the existing system of international courts and 'tribunals' should not continue to work.
Then we each can hold war crimes 'tribunals' and let justice prevail.
It is probably there that the reference to legal services to be provided in proceedings in federal courts and 'tribunals' would need to be inserted.
So we're looking at international 'tribunals' such as the International Court of Justice or the UN Standing Committee on Torture.
Everybody will be sending their courts and 'tribunals' into other jurisdictions, and then you have a tremendous mess and it is not the mess that the federal arrangements seem to contemplate.
Everyone has the right to equality before the courts and 'tribunals' of law.
That freedom necessarily extends to the workings of the courts and 'tribunals' which administer and enforce the laws of this country.
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