Crackdown on illegal sand mining hits construction, govt steps in
MAFIA IN BIHAR State planning complete takeover of sand mining and trading business
An ongoing government crackdown on illegal mining has hit sand supply for construction work in Patna and neighbouring districts of Bihar.
Many builders have been forced to halt work for now due to a shortage in supply or higher costs, leaving thousands of labourers and others associated with the trade, unemployed.
“In the New Patna area... work has stopped at 900 under-construction buildings,” said Vishnu Kumar, a construction engineer in Danapur.
“Sand brought from outside costs₹8,000-10,000 per tractor. Earlier it was available at ₹3,000 per tractor.”
Sand mining is a high-stakes business, and the estimated trade ranges between ₹7,000 and ₹8,000 crore annually, though Bihar government earns revenue of nearly ₹500 crore out of it.
Police are cracking the whip on illegal sand mafia through raids in Patna, Maner, Ara and other districts and have seized huge stocks of sand. So far, police have confiscated 40 Poclain machines (meant for quarrying sand) and more than 600 trucks and arrested over 200 persons. The law prohibits mining on the riverbed during monsoon (July 1 to September 30).
The crackdown started soon after the new NDA government took over amid allegations of sand mafia’s links with the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD). Deputy chief minister Sushil Kumar Modi has been linking the sandmining business to RJD chief Lalu Prasad for a long time.
In the face of crisis, representatives of the real estate sector, chamber of commerce and industries recently called on Sushil Kumar Modi, who is said to have assured them that the seized stocks would be released. But the government has announced an auction of the same.
“We have around 75-lakh CFT seized stock of sand in Patna and Saran and auction at the two places will be held on September 11-12,” said state’s mines director Satish Kumar Singh.
Also, the state’s department of mines and geology is working on a new policy — Bihar minor mineral rules, 2017 — for complete takeover of the trading business, following the cancellation of all the existing licenses. Mining of sand and trading will not be with the same person anymore.
The move, which has been approved by chief minister Nitish Kumar, is aimed at cleaning the system besides generating additional revenue directly to the government and address growing environmental concerns. Principal secretary, mines and geology, KK Pathak has also asked concerned district magistrates to serve show-cause notices to all the 25 license holders for not adhering to environmental guidelines/ laid down tender provisions and mining beyond the approved area. “We expect revenue to increase 10 times to reach around ₹5,000 crore once the loopholes are plugged,” said Singh.
In Bihar, mining lease has been settled in favour of 25 companies, allegedly owned by powerful people. Bihar’s unprecedented floods this year — which have claimed 514 lives — have been blamed on indiscriminate sand mining as one of the reasons.
The weakening of embankments due to unplanned mining activities was cited as one of the key reasons behind Gandak breaches. “Due to mining, there are topographical changes in the river, causing depositions in the form of siltation. That causes floods,” said VS Dubey of the department of geology, Patna University,
Five high courts across the country have constituted special benches to hear criminal appeals in cases where the accused has got a lawyer at the expense of a state through the legal aid cell.
These benches have already started functioning in the high courts of Odisha, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Karnataka, official sources in the Supreme Court told HT.
The move follows a letter from Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra to HC chief justices, pointing to the necessity of giving priority to such cases.
A week after he took over, CJI Misra sent a communiqué to the chief justices asking them make “five-plus zero” a reality.
To achieve the target of hearing appeals not more than five years old, the CJI suggested early hearings to criminal appeals filed directly by inmates languishing in jails.
“Delay in disposal of such appeals raises question about the efficacy of the administration of justice as a whole and the criminal justice system in particular,” read his letter dated September 4.
He recalled suggestions made in the past to fast-track cases in this specified category. Some of the measures included constitution of special courts and working during vacations.
The letter called upon the chief justices to “explore the possibility of hearing such criminal appeals/jail appeals, in which legal aid has been provided, on Saturdays by specifically constituted bench, after obtaining consent of the concerned legal-aid counsel and state counsel”.
TO ACHIEVE THE TARGET OF HEARING APPEALS NO MORE THAN FIVE YEARS OLD, CJI SUGGESTED EARLY HEARINGS TO APPEALS FILED
DIRECTLY BY INMATES