Mohan Parasaran

Senior Advocate
Mohan Parasaran
Solicitor General of India
Assumed office
2013 (yet to assume)
Preceded by Rohinton Fali Nariman
Additional Solicitor General of India
In office
2004–2013
Personal details
Relations K. Parasaran (father), Saroja Parasaran (mother)
Alma mater University of Madras, University of Delhi, University of Cambridge.
Profession Lawyer

Mohan Parasaran is a Senior Advocate at the Supreme Court of India. In February 2013 he was appointed the Solicitor General of India and continued in this post till May 2014.[1] Previously he held the post of Additional Solicitor General of India for nine years.[2] In 2012, he resigned from the post of Additional Solicitor General but the resignation was not accepted by the Government.[3] He was designated senior advocate in 2002.[4]

Personal life

Parasaran is the son of the former Attorney General of India and Senior Advocate, K. Parasaran and Saroja Parasaran.[5] He has two brothers and two sisters.[6] He lives in New Delhi, but frequents Chennai, where he grew up. His mother Mrs Saroja Parasaran is first cousin of actor Kamalahasan

Education

Parasaran has received the B.A. (Economics) First Class from the University of Madras in 1981, a Bachelor of Law degree from Delhi University in 1984 and a Master of Laws from the University of Cambridge.[7][8]

Appointment as Solicitor General

Parasaran was appointed as the Solicitor General of India after this post become vacant due to resignation of Rohinton Nariman before completion of his tenure. Rohinton Nariman had resigned from the post, allegedly, following a difference of opinion with the Law Minister, Ashwini Kumar.[9] Mohan Parasaran's appointment as Solicitor General of India came to an end in May 2014 with the change in Government, and in his place, Ranjit Kumar has been appointed as the new Solicitor General of India with effect from 7 Jun 2014.[10]

Notable Cases

Parasaran has represented the Government of India in landmark cases, including the dispute between the Ambani brothers on the KGD6 gasfields, international tax matters with revenue effect of over $3.2 billion in the Vodafone case, the levy of luxury tax, sports regulation, and public interest matters concerning food security and shelter.[11] He has also appeared in the Commission of Inquiry, which probed into the Airbus 320 crash in Mangalore.[12]

References

LegalEra Magazine Interview

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