Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

SC gives Raj 48 hrs to shut illegal mining units

- Bhadra Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

THE TOP COURT WAS TOLD THAT 38 OF THE 128 HILLOCKS IN THE STATE’S ARAVALLI RANGE REGION HAD DISAPPEARE­D DUE TO MINING ACTIVITIES

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered the Rajasthan government to shut down illegal mining units in the state within 48 hours after the court was told that 38 of the 128 hillocks in the state’s Aravalli range region had disappeare­d due to mining, and this was adding to a rise in pollution levels in parts of north India including the national capital.

The bench of justices MB Lokur and Deepak Gupta was hearing a case related to illegal mining. “What is happening in Rajasthan? Humans seem to be flying away with hills just like Hanuman,” justice Lokur asked the Rajasthan state counsel who did not refute the disappeara­nce of hills, which the Forest Survey of India (FSI) had pointed out in a report submitted to the SC in June this year.

The judges said that illegal mining was one of the main causes for alarming levels of pollution in Delhi. “Hills act as barriers. If you start removing them the pollution from there will enter Delhi. For the sake of a minority in your state you are endangerin­g the lives of lakhs of people living in Delhi,” justice Lokur said. When the bench was told that the Rajasthan government was earning ₹5,000 crore as royalty through mining operations in the state, justice Lokur responded: “For royalty, you are putting Delhi residents at a risk. Since you admit that there is illegal mining... give your royalty to the people of Delhi. Hospitals are overcrowde­d.”

Gurgaon-based Chetan Agarwal, an ecological analyst, said, “Aravalli act as barrier to the Thar desert, and the dust storms which come from there are blocked by the Aravallis...

“Deposits of sand dunes on the western flank of Aravallis act as barrier to desert storms. Aravallis, being old mountains, have cracks and fissures that facilitate infiltrati­on of rainwater into the ground. Aravallis are like mini-groundwate­r towers for surroundin­g region, they are also extremely biodiversi­ty rich,” he said.

Though the state admitted there was illegal mining in over 115 hectares of land in Rajasthan, it contested the FSI survey’s findings. It also said FSI carried out the inspection without consulting local authoritie­s.

But the court said it was compelled to issue directions because it was not satisfied with Rajasthan government’s affidavit in response to the FSI report. It ordered the chief secretary of Rajasthan to file a compliance affidavit by Friday and fixed October 29 as the next date of hearing. “It’s not proper to make wild allegation­s against a premier government body [FSI],” the court recorded in its order.

“Entire issue of mining in Aravalli is being taken very lightly. The report says out of 128 samples taken by the FSI as many as 38 hillocks have vanished. This has not been denied in its status report by the state, which indicates lack of concern on the state’s part,” the apex court order added.

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