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Jagmohan plans strategy to heed SC orders
By Our Staff Reporter
NEW DELHI, DEC. 7
The Union Urban Development Minister, Mr. Jagmohan, will hold a
meeting with senior officials of the Delhi Government and local
agencies to chalk out a strategy to implement the orders of the
Supreme Court for closing down all polluting industries in the
non-conforming areas within four weeks.
The Supreme Court had appointed the Urban Development Ministry as
the nodal agency on September 12 and today asked it to supervise
the closure and shifting of industries in the residential areas
and also given it the liberty to approach the Apex Court if it
encountered any difficulty in securing implementation of the
order.
Appealing to the people to understand the need for accepting the
Court orders, Mr. Jagmohan asked the affected persons to
cooperate with the implementing agencies while assuring them that
all possible efforts would be made to redress their grievances at
the earliest by giving them land at alternate places.
The Urban Development Ministry had, in an affidavit, submitted
before the Court on November 27, said that since the
implementation machinery vested with the Delhi Government and the
local agencies, and taking into account the experience of the
last two months, no effective role could be played by the Nodal
Agency.
In its affidavit, the Union Government had also requested the
Apex Court to give some more time for relocation of industries.
The Court has, in substance, agreed to this request and orally
directed the Additional Solicitor-General, Mr. Kirit Rawal to ask
the nodal agency to prepare a plan indicating the time-frame in
which the non-polluting industries from non-conforming areas
could be shifted.
Reacting to ``shifting blame on the Delhi Development Authority
(DDA) and through it to the Union Government'' by the Delhi
Government, Mr. Jagmohan said it was untenable and the point had
been raised in the affidavit also it was said that if any work
had been held up on account of formal clearance from the DDA, the
Chief Minister could have raised the matter with the Lt. Governor
who is the DDA ex-officio chairman and plays the coordinating
role between it and the Delhi Government.
Moreover, the point had never been raised in any of the
affidavits filed by the Delhi Government before the Supreme
Court. Also, the Delhi Government has large departments dealing
with lands, buildings and urban affairs and the day-to-day
general executive work is handled at the local level while the
Union Ministry largely deals with the policy and Parliamentary
work, Mr. Jagmohan said.
The Minister pointed out that blaming the DDA for delay in
acquiring alternate land subsequent shifting of industries was an
``afterthought'' since the Delhi Chief Minister is the
chairperson of the Consultative Committee of the DDA and three
Delhi MLAs are members of the DDA, none of whom brought the
matter to the notice of the Court.''
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