Millennium Post

‘Trees would not be cut down if they were voters’

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NEW DELHI: If trees were voters, they would not be hacked. This was the reaction of the Delhi High Court on Monday which suggested a CAG audit of timber generated by either encroacher­s or the authoritie­s for various projects in the national Capital.

“If trees were included in electoral roll as voters, then they would remain,” a Bench of justices Badar Durrez Ahmed and Ashutosh Kumar said after being told that a huge number of trees have been felled by local authoritie­s, like Delhi Metro, for projects and by encroacher­s, like in the Asola sanctuary.

The court was hearing a PIL initiated by it on the issue of air pollution and its causes, one of which was the decline in forest and green cover in Delhi and its surroundin­g areas.

The Bench was also of the view that there should be an audit by the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) into the number of trees felled in Delhi and what was done with the timber generated.

“That is an income that has to be accounted for, hence the need for CAG audit,” the Bench said. The court also noted that the Delhi government has not adhered to its timelines fixed early last year for identifyin­g encroachme­nts in the Asolabhati sanctuary and removing them.

“None of the timelines have been met,” it said and told the government that wherever it has identified encroachme­nts, the people have to be removed from there and relocated.

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