Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Police map mining hot spots in 3 NCR districts

- Leena Dhankhar leena.dhankhar@hindustant­imes.com

Nine days after a 58-year-old Haryana deputy superinten­dent of police (DSP) was run over by a truck while investigat­ing a lead on illegal mining in Nuh district, police from the three districts of Nuh, Gurugram and Faridabad have launched an operation to identify the hot spots of mining in the region, officers aware of the matter said on Wednesday.

The officers said they are creating a grid based on complaints and cases registered in the past, adding that adequate forces will be ensured in the identified areas to keep a check on the people and vehicles involved in illegal mining activities.

The officers said that the respective district police have identified 25 spots in Nuh, 10 in Faridabad, and 13 in Gurugram.

First in 2002, and then in 2009, the Supreme Court banned mining of major and minor minerals in the eco-sensitive Aravalli hills in Faridabad, Gurugram and Nuh to restore the hills to their traditiona­l ecological value. The 2009 order said that all mining activities must be suspended till statutory provisions for restoratio­n and reclamatio­n were complied with, particular­ly in cases where pits or quarries had been abandoned.

According to officials, the stones and sand from Aravalli hills is illegally extracted and sold to local suppliers of constructi­on material and building contractor­s.

Sharing details of the ongoing crackdown on illegal mining in Nuh, superinten­dent of police Varun Singla said checkpoint­s have been set up and additional force has been deployed around the areas under mining. “We are closely monitoring illegal mining sites and keeping a check on locals and vehicles involved in such activities. We have identified 25 villages where the locals used to illegally extract stones,” he said.

Since April, the Nuh police has lodged 23 FIRs in connection with illegal mining, seized 68 vehicles and recovered ₹43 lakh in fines, Singla added.

According to the state mines and geology department, there has been a more than fourfold rise in the cases of illegal mining registered across Haryana in the last three years.

Narender Kadian, deputy commission­er of police, NIT, Faridabad, said they have made an elaborate plan to stop illegal mining in the district. “We have identified the vulnerable areas, and have deployed an additional 30 personnel at the Pali check post notorious for illegal mining. Police posts have been set up and all vehicles using the stretches connecting to Badhkal, Pali, Dhoj and Surajkund are being checked. We are also keeping a close watch on the villages around the illegal mining sites,” said Kadian, who took charge of the area on Wednesday.

Sube Singh, Faridabad police spokespers­on, said 98 cases have been registered and 96 vehicles impounded under illegal mining cases in the district in the last five years. According to Gurugram police, 14 cases of illegal mining have been registered in the last four months.

Preet Pal Sangwan, assistant commission­er of police (crime) Gurugram, said mining was not going on at any site in the district, but some areas have been identified based on past complaints for additional checks.

“There were complaints from Naurangpur and Bar Gujjar areas, but now everything is under control,” he said.

The Aravalli Bachao Citizens Movement, a group of activists working for protecting Aravallis, reiterated their demand for the formation of a separate and autonomous, pan-state Aravalli Protection Authority which treats the threats emerging out in different districts in their totality.

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