Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Protest against blockade on Dwarka e-way

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

GURUGAM: Residents of developing sectors along t he Dwarka Expressway on Sunday held a protest against the blockade set up on the Northern Peripheral Road (NPR) and the delay in shifting the Kherki Daula toll plaza. The protesters also paid tribute to the CRPF personnel who were killed in an attack in Pulwama, Srinagar.

Over 150 protesters, carrying banners and placards, and wearing black ribbons and arm-bands, gathered on the NPR around 4pm.

The residents, including children and senior citizens, upon gathering at the spot, first paid tribute to the victims of the terrorist attack.

Then, they marched towards the Kherki Daula toll plaza, up to the junction where the blockade has been set up on the NPR by the concession­aire.

The protesters, waving their banners, raised slogans against the highway authoritie­s for closing the road despite directions to remove the wall being given by chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar.

Pravin Malik, the vice-presi- dent of United Associatio­n of New Gurugram, which had called the protest, said that the administra­tion should give immediate relief to residents of new sectors by connecting the NPR and Delhi-gurgaon Expressway. “We are also looking at legal options to approach the court for seeking relief (by shifting the toll plaza). However, the authoritie­s need to take early action,” he said.

It may be recalled that NPR was blocked since 2016 by the highway concession­aire, who had built a 300-metre wall to stop the traffic.

However, t he wall was removed by last month by the Haryana Shahari Vikas Pradhikara­n (HSVP) after repeated complaints by the residents to the chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar, who, after a spot check on January 23, directed that the wall be removed in public interest.

The decision was opposed by the highway concession­aire, MCEPL, who approached the Delhi high court and managed to get interim relief till February 19 and got the road closed. Since then, the residents of developing sectors have been carrying out protests, citing the move as unfair and unjust. NEW DELHI: Panic was triggered among security personnel at Rajender Place Metro station after an injured and bleeding man entered the station premises and collapsed after seeking help on Sunday night.

A senior central industrial security force (CISF) officer said, “The injured man entered the station while he was bleeding. He sought help from the security personnel deployed at the station and then collapsed. One of our staffers called an ambulance and rushed him to a nearby hospital and the police were informed ,” said the officer.

DCP (Railways and Metro), Dinesh Kumar Gupta, said, “We are collecting details about the incident and the sequence of events leading to the incident.”

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 ?? YOGENDRA KUMAR/HT ?? Protesters gathered on the NPR around 4pm
YOGENDRA KUMAR/HT Protesters gathered on the NPR around 4pm

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