Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Rail land body fined ₹5.9 cr for ‘damaging 990 trees’ in Dwarka

- Jasjeev Gandhiok Bijwasan Rail Terminal Redevelopm­ent project UER II DELHI IGI Airport

NEW DELHI: The Rail Land Developmen­t Authority (RLDA), the agency redevelopi­ng the Bijwasan rail terminal in Dwarka’s Sector 21, has been fined ₹5.93 crore by the Delhi forest and wildlife department for damaging or illegally felling 990 trees in a 4.09 hectare area of the project site, forest officials aware of the matter said.

The rail body said it will comply with the findings of the forest department and will submit the fine amount soon.

The forest and wildlife department had last month, in a rare move, carried out an excavation at the site to find “proof” of tree felling — in the form of leftover roots or dead trees — after

RLDA repeatedly denied having harmed any tree.

The six-day excavation, during which time all other work was stopped, found that nearly 150 trees were buried at the project site.

Around 100 of those trees were re-erected at the same spot, while nearly 54 others were deemed to be still “alive”, with a slim chance of taking root again, according to forest officials.

A senior forest official said following the excavation, a hearing was held on June 8 and RLDA agreed to comply with any directions issued by the tree officer.

The forest officials said while the excavation exercise covered only an area of 0.62 hectare, a standard extrapolat­ion method was used to calculate the number of trees that were felled in the entire 4.09 hectare area of the project site.

“While the extrapolat­ion was done based on a rough calculatio­n, it is unlikely the final figure we arrived at will be any different from the actual number of trees that were felled or damaged. Based on this, a final order was issued to RLDA on June 14, imposing a fine of ₹5.93 crore on it. The agency has time until June 30 to submit the amount,” a forest official said, asking not to be named.

The forest department began investigat­ion into the project in January 2022, after local green activists Naveen Solanki and Himanshu Saini filed a complaint with the Delhi Police and the forest department, alleging that hundreds of trees had been cut at the Bijwasan site without due permission from the forest department.

On Friday, an RLDA official, on condition of anonymity, said notwithsta­nding the findings, that RLDA was a responsibl­e government entity and will abide by the decisions of the tree officer.

“We will respect and abide by the directions of the tree officer in the matter,” said the RLDA official.

 ?? ?? The forest department during an excavation at the site last month found that nearly 150 trees were buried at the site.
The forest department during an excavation at the site last month found that nearly 150 trees were buried at the site.

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