NEW DELHI, April 14: Disgruntled Army, Navy and Air Force personnel may no longer have to go to a court of law in search of justice. The Government is working on a draft to institute an ``internal'' tribunal which will function as the last point of call for any soldier with a promotion, appointment or a posting grievance.Once the draft is approved by the Defence Ministry and passes the necessary legal scrutiny, the Government will move Parliament to amend the Army, Navy and Air Force Acts.Confirming this to The Indian Express, Defence Minister George Fernandes said: ``I find it revolting when people in the Services, people who are risking their lives all the time. when they have to go for justice to a court of law. the case drags on for years. Morale gets affected.''Fernandes plans to create an apparatus within the structure of an integrated MoD that would have sanction and the necessary authority to look into all statutory complaints and redressal of grievances submitted by Serviceofficers. On being asked whether this ``structure'' would be like that of the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT), Fernandes said: ``CAT is far too complicated.''There are currently around 1,490 cases concerned with military promotion matters pending in court. These are the culmination of a long process wherein the officers have exhausted the legal process within the Services and the MoD. And the intervention of the courts in promotion-related matters has always been a sore point in South Block. While the military hierarchy looks upon it as an example of judicial interference, some regard it as the `due justice'.Fernandes claimed that a bureaucrat would not be sitting over a military tribunal. ``It will be an internal body. It isn't a bureaucrat who will be sitting in judgement. I believe the resolution of any problem pertaining to Service personnel. should be within the service itself. The finer points are yet to be worked out.''A draft document for the internal tribunal has taken some form,which the Defence Minister confirmed.On whether all the parties would support this, Fernandes was hopeful of a consensus, ``because there is no politics in this; this is something which concerns the morale and the trust which the men who are out there in uniform should have with the system (sic).''