Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Prosecute officials for not acting on pollution complaints, SC tells CPCB

TOUGH ACT Under green laws, criminal cases can be registered against officials

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday directed the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) to initiate prosecutio­n of government officials who have not penalised polluters against whom it received complaints.

A bench of justices MB Lokur and Deepak Gupta issued the directive after CPCB informed it that the board has taken the first step towards prosecutin­g such officials and issued show-cause notices to them. Under environmen­t protection law, a criminal case can be registered against erring government servants who do not comply with CPCB directions. The maximum jail term for this offence is for six months.

Additional solicitor general AS Nadkarni, appearing for CPCB, placed an affidavit before the court, giving the number of complaints it has received on its Facebook page, phone app, Twitter handle and e-mail. He said from November 1 to November 22 the board received 749 complaints. CPCB addressed around 500 complaints using 52 teams and sent the rest to various department­s with directions under the law to resolve them. Show cause notices were issued to them indicating the intent to initiate criminal prosecutio­n for their failure to control air-pollution, Nadkarni submitted.

Similarly out of 3,337 complaints received on the “Sameer app” 923 complaints were resolved, 1248 complaints are being attended to, 349 complaints are under investigat­ion and 817 complaints are yet to be addressed. agencies.

On October 27, union environmen­t minister Harsh Vardhan directed CPCB to initiate criminal proceeding­s against government agencies and officers failing to check sources of pollution even after being informed by the pollution control agencies.

Nadkarni urged the court to direct authoritie­s to take action or face contempt. The require- ment for such a direction was justified by Nadkarni on the ground that a trial under the normal course would take years to culminate. “By then the erring officer might retire. If we need to really help Delhi, I would request this court to direct the nodal agencies to comply with your direction,” Nadkarni submitted.

However, the court refused to pass such a direction and said it cannot “micro-manage the issue.” “No, we will simply say prosecute them,” Justice Lokur said. Advocate Aparajita Singh, assisting the court said, there should a fear of law and criminal prosecutio­n must be launched against the officers who do not follow the directions.

HT reported on October 28 that less than 5% of the complaints received in Delhi on the Sameer app between September 15 and October 15 were addressed.

The maximum complaints with CPCB were for constructi­on and demolition activities, followed by burning of waste, road dust, traffic congestion and industrial emission.

The joint-inspection teams comprising officials from the union government, Delhi government and civic bodies which were sent out between November 1 and November 10 also reported several violations. Even though constructi­on activities were banned during that 10-day period, the highest number of violations pertained to this.

CPCB started its services for receiving complaints on various social media platforms on October 31, subsequent to the top court’s direction.

“The CPCB is primarily a standard setting body. It is the state pollution control boards that need to initiate criminal proceeding­s against agencies that fail to control pollution. The Sc-appointed EPCA can also initiate such action in DELH-NCR. But everyone is passing the buck and nothing really is happening, apart from issuing a few warnings to the defaulters,” said Ritwick Dutta, environmen­t lawyer.

 ??  ?? A boy on his way to school on smoggy morning at Teen Murti Marg. The air quality in Delhi slipped back to the ‘very poor’ category on Monday.
A boy on his way to school on smoggy morning at Teen Murti Marg. The air quality in Delhi slipped back to the ‘very poor’ category on Monday.
 ?? MUJEEB FARUQUI/HT ?? Police and forensic team at the site where the remains of a fiveyearol­d girl was found in Gwalior on Saturday.
MUJEEB FARUQUI/HT Police and forensic team at the site where the remains of a fiveyearol­d girl was found in Gwalior on Saturday.

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