Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NGT orders action on Udaipur hotels

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has directed the Rajasthan State Pollution Control Board and the Udaipur district administra­tion to inquire and take action into the allegation of noise pollution allegedly caused by hotels in the city of lakes.

A bench headed by NGT chairperso­n Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel directed the Rajasthan State Pollution Control Board to take action and submit a report of within one month. “We are of the view that the violation of the law discussed above needs to be loo -ked into and action taken according to the law, by the Rajasthan State Pollution Control Board and the district administra­tion.”

“Accordingl­y, we direct the Rajasthan State Pollution Con- trol Board, the district magistrate and the superinten­dent of police, Udaipur, to take appropriat­e action in the matter,” the bench, also comprising Justice S P Wangdi, said. The tribunal posted the matter for considerin­g the report on December 4.

It also reiterated that every order of the NGT is binding as a decree of court and non-compliance is actionable by way of punitive action in terms of the National Green Tribunal Act, 2010.

The order came on a plea filed by Sajjan Garh Resident Associatio­n, alleging that loud music was being used by Hotel Mewar Garh Palace and other restaurant­s near the Biological Park in Udaipur.

“They play loud music till 2-3 am on different occasions. It disturbs students... It goes up in winter and no one can even perform Puja at night,” the plea read.

Barmer assembly constituen­cy in western Rajasthan has largely voted to power a put Congress candidate – seven out of the 14 times an election was held here. The other seven times, Congress’s candidate was the runner-up. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has held the seat once (in 2003) while independen­t candidates have won twice (in 1993 and 1962).

The Congress’s hold on this seat can be gauged from the fact that when the BJP swept Rajasthan in the 2013 elections, winning 163 of the 200 assembly seats, Barmer was one of the few seats the grand old party had managed to retain.

The assembly constituen­cy is largely populated by Jats, who number about 50,000, followed the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (40,000), Muslims (20,000), Rajputs (15,000) and Brahmins (10,000).

Despite not having a sizeable representa­tion in population, Jain community has had its candidates winning the seat six times. The incumbent MLA, Congress’s Mevaram Jain, will be completing his second term.

With elections due by the end of this year, the political tug of war between the BJP and the Congress in Rajasthan had, until as recently as January, spilled over into Barmer’s oil fields – the region’s, as also of the state’s, production belt. (The Barmer basin accounts for 20% of the country’s domestic crude production.) The two parties had exchanged communicat­ion over Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s move to “lay the stone” for an oil refinery – one that Congress’s then president Sonia Gandhi had already done so in September 2013. With the change in power that year, and BJP’s Vasundhara Raje facing blame for the project not taking off in 2004, the BJP declared that project as “unvia- ble” and announced a “revised” deal, paving way for Modi’s stone-laying ceremony in 2018.

Like elsewhere in Rajasthan, the problems that beset the region includes supply of saline and fluoride-ridden water. Lack of health and proper education facilities are other major issues and both sectors face staff crunch. A medical college was announced in 2012, it is yet to see the light of day.

The constituen­cy also faces road and rail connectivi­ty, and not enough job opportunit­ies means people migrate to other regions, despite the presence of Cairn Oil & Gas and JSW Energy, that have brought significan­t wealth into this region.

Speaking to Hindustan Times, BJP’s Priyanka Choudhary, the runner-up on this seat in the 2013 elections, accused the Congress MLA of not ensuring any developmen­t work in the constituen­cy despite representi­ng it for the past ten years.

She said that if she wins the Male Female

Previous election

votes polled

Winner

Mevaram Jain, Congress Runner-up

Priyanka Choudhary, BJP Win Margin: 5,913 votes

NEW DELHI: BARMER: I have fulfilled the promises I made such as completion of drinking water project, drinking water schemes in rural areas, CT scan facility at govt hospitals etc. Congress will win this election. MEVARAM JAIN, incumbent Barmer MLA RAJASTHAN

election (even as her party was yet to announce the list of candidates for the polls), she will prioritise the education sector.

Jain, on his part, said he has fulfilled “all the promises he had made”. He claimed he had ensured completion of mega drinking water project and also sanctioned drinking water schemes for rural areas.

He alleged that the ruling party has “intentiona­lly stalled” the developmen­tal projects in the region.

So many times people have voted for Congress but they still lack basic facilities. I will ensure post graduation at Girls’ College and an agricultur­al university in Barmer, if I win. PRIYANKA CHOUDHARY, BJP nominee in 2013

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