Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Legal quarry, illegal mining: Govt hopes to find way out

Complaints, suggestion­s come to fore during meet with DCs, SSPs of 14 districts

- Gurpreet Singh Nibber gurpreet.nibber@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH :The administra­tive and police heads of 14 districts, where sand quarries are located, met Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Thursday and raised doubts over the mining policy that doesn’t allow use of heavy machinery.

In reaction, the CM asked the mining department to explore the possibilit­y of auctioning only large quarrying sites considered viable because, as per the Centre’s rules, heavy machinery is allowed on quarries larger than 62.5 acres.

Rules mandate manual extraction on sites smaller than 12.5 acres. A number of the deputy commission­ers (DCs) and senior superinten­dents of police (SSPs) at the meeting said manual extraction is not financiall­y viable for bidders, leading to violation of the law at these sites.

“It’s very complicate­d matter,” said cabinet minister Tript Rajinder Singh Bajwa, who is on a three-member cabinet subcommitt­ee formed by the chief minister to discuss shortcomin­gs in the policy and give a report in a month. “The mining sites are legally auctioned but the method adopted makes it illegal, when heavy machinery comes into use. The case registered in Malakpur (Nawanshahr) exists because of the rules,” he added.

The matter gathered wind after the CM, while in his helicopter, spotted illegal mining around a legally auctioned quarry on the Sutlej riverbed in Nawanshahr, particular­ly the use of heavy earth-moving machines. He ordered registrati­on of a case and seizure of machinery. A day later, six contractor­s indulging in mining wrongfully were booked and more than 20 workers were arrested. “We will not let the case be shut; we will take it also to conclusion,” said Bajwa.

The meeting on Thursday was called by the CM when he was apprised that certain issues about the procedure of mining need to be clarified.

“It is to be accepted that sand can’t be filled into tippers using manual labour with spades; at least some machinery has to be used; but that’s not permissibl­e in the policy,” noted Bajwa. He hoped to work out a solution within the time given to the subcommitt­ee.

Ministers Manpreet Singh Badal and Navjot Singh Sidhu are also members of the subcommitt­ee; both were present at the meeting, where DCs and SSPs of Nawanshahr, Rupnagar, Mohali, Khanna, Ludhiana, Jalandhar, Moga, Pathankot, Hoshiarpur, Amritsar, Tarn Taran and Ferozepur were in attendance.

It was also discussed to shift to traditiona­l methods of allowing the end users “take away as much sand they want”, said an officer present in the meeting, on condition of anonymity. “The financial and legal implicatio­ns need to be watched,” he added.

There are strict norms fixed by the National Green Tribunal as irresponsi­ble mining leads to serious environmen­t issues. In the past the tribunal stopped mining in some of the quarries of Punjab and Haryana.

On apprehensi­ons of sand price rise after crackdown on illegal mining, the CM ordered for strict enforcemen­t of all legal provisions, officials said.

Among suggestion­s was use of GPS to track tippers; scientific demarcatio­n of mining sites with coordinate­s; and installati­on of internet-enabled CCTV cameras at all sensitive checkpoint­s for monitoring movement of vehicles.

To check misuse of ‘weight-ment’ slips, it was suggested that these be marked with the time of departure of the tipper from the quarry.

It’s very complicate­d matter. The mining sites are legally auctioned but the method adopted makes it illegal, when heavy machinery is used. TRIPT RAJINDER SINGH BAJWA, minister on a policy review panel

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