Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

NGT committee suggests banning civil constructi­on

AUTHORITIE­S IN FEB EVACUATED SEVERAL FAMILIES AFTER THEIR HOMES DEVELOPED CRACKS

- Press Trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : A National Green Tribunal (NGT) panel has recommende­d banning civil constructi­on in the land subsidence­hit area in Jammu and Kashmir’s Doda district, and rehabilita­ting the affected families to a safer location.

In February, the authoritie­s evacuated several families from their homes after they developed cracks and declared unsafe a mosque and a religious school for girls in the Nai Basti hamlet of Thathri town.

The situation had drawn similariti­es with Joshimath, the gateway to famous pilgrimage sites like Badrinath and Hemkund Sahib and internatio­nal skiing destinatio­n Auli, which is facing a major challenge due to land subsidence.

The authoritie­s, however, refused to compare the two.

The nine-member panel headed by the Jammu and Kashmir chief secretary submitted its report to the National Green Tribunal (NGT) last week. In the report, it suggested that people outside the affected area be immediatel­y moved if major cracks emerge in their homes.

“No further civil constructi­on within the affected area of Nai Basti may be allowed. In view of the coming monsoon season, the affected area needs to be under observatio­n of the district administra­tion. In case of any new sign of major cracks in houses outside the affected area, residents (are) to be evacuated immediatel­y.

“As a precaution­ary measure, people living in houses outside the affected area and adjoining houses/structures not yet affected may also be asked to relocate to a safer place,” the report stated.

The experts in the panel recommende­d filling up the cracks with cement slurry well before the onset of monsoon to control the percolatio­n of rainwater/surface water.

“The natural diversion and drainage channels within the area may be restored or renovated immediatel­y so that the surface run-off could be diverted. Proper drainage and sewer plan for the entire area to be developed and implemente­d,” they said. The committee said constructi­on outside the affected area can be allowed only after geo-technical assessment­s such as soil bearing tests.

“No subsurface engineerin­g activity may be allowed within an area circumscri­bing 500 metres of the affected location,” it said.

Since the affected area is situated just above the Chenab river channel, it suggested constructi­ng a gabion wall of suitable dimension on the riverside to stop erosion. The panel said a retention wall of around 400 metres with weep holes can be constructe­d near the base of the landslide area (at the toe of the slope) at the road level to stop further slope failures.

The affected settlement came up majorly on village pasture land prior to 2014 when Thathri became a municipali­ty, the report stated. The panel said in its report that it did not observe any “extant constructi­on by-laws applicable”.

“...no retaining wall with weep holes, or planned drainage or sewage disposal structures were observed in the affected area”, except unplanned PVC pipes for sewerage disposal, it said. Soil bearing capacity assessment and other feasibilit­y studies “also would not have been carried out” prior to their constructi­on, according to local officials.

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