Deccan Chronicle

Char Dham verdict welcome

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The decision of the Supreme Court to allow the Central government, via the ministry of defence, to widen roads as part of the 900-km-long Char Dham project in Uttarakhan­d, on the basis of national security requiremen­ts, overriding certain plausible objections from environmen­talists, is welcome for its delicate balancing of concerns.

Given the India-China face-off militarily and sporadic clashes at the Line of Actual Control, our Armed Forces deserve our complete support, which crucially includes upgrading of infrastruc­ture, especially our roads, to the specificat­ions sought by our forces to use during emergencie­s.

The double-lane roads with paved shoulder systems of a width of 10 metres, that our Army needs to transport heavy machinery and large numbers of troops rapidly, must not be allowed to become a victim of overzealou­s Greens using our judiciary as a platform to cause obstacles and risks to national security.

As the highest court observed, the project had no malafide executive intent. With an investment of Rs 12,000 crores, these roads would also positively impact highway connectivi­ty to four Hindu pilgrimage sites – a secondary benefit.

The SC bench comprising Justices D.Y. Chandrachu­d, Vikram Nath and Surya Kant rightfully observed that the security challenges at our borders need a national resolve to be met and cannot be treated on a par with other usual concerns of the environmen­t or social impact.

It is now imperative on the government­s, Central and states, not to misuse this profound observatio­n as an excuse to bulldoze environmen­tal concerns in other projects across the country, because as the apex court bench has observed, security concerns, especially in border areas, trump regular concerns.

Politician­s are wont to find loopholes to push other agendas but national security is too significan­t and sacred a need and it cannot become de rigueur to use it to bypass other issues elsewhere.

The SC bench rightfully observed

that the security challenges at our

borders need a national resolve to be met and cannot be treated on a

par with other usual concerns of

the environmen­t or social impact.

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