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AIM TO DOUBLE FARMERS’ INCOME BY 2022 TO TACKLE SUICIDES: GOVT TO SC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

In a blow to the powerful mining barons, the Supreme Court on Monday rejected their plea against e-auction of iron ore, saying the sale and purchase of minerals in the past was done in an "outrageous manner" and on "unacceptab­le terms", causing huge leakage of public revenue.

The apex court rejected the plea against e-auction of minerals in Karnataka which was supported by Vedanta Ltd, holding that its "horrific" experience of the past cannot be allowed to resurface.

It said that issues of lifting the cap on production of minerals and restoratio­n of ecology and environmen­t through a Comprehens­ive Environmen­t Plans for the Mining Impact Zone (CEPMIZ) were under active considerat­ion of the court.

"We, therefore, for the present, reject the applicatio­n filed by Federation of Indian Mineral Industries (FIMI) South and consequent­ly do not entertain the support to the prayers made therein by M/s Vedanta Ltd.

"For the same reasons, we do not also accept the suggestion­s of the Central Empow- ered Committee (CEC) and the State of Karnataka as made in their respective reports/ affidavits filed before the court," a bench of Justices Ranjan Gogoi, P C Pant and Navin Sinha said.

The bench said "the experience of the past has been horrific. It cannot be allowed to come back.

"Sale and purchase of iron ore had been conducted in the most outrageous manner and on wholly unacceptab­le terms resulting, inter alia, in huge leakage of government revenue.

Such experience­s and events cannot be allowed to resurface."

FIMI (Southern Region) in its plea has sought that iron and manganese ore may be sold in Karnataka without recourse to e-auction conducted by the monitoring committee set up by apex court.

The plea was supported by M/s Vedanta Ltd, an iron-ore lessee operating within Karnataka through its petition.

The bench said what has been suggested by CEC and the in-principle approval of state government would seem to indicate that in place of the monitoring committee, another committee consisting of officials of Karnataka be made to oversee and supervise the sale of iron ore through a hybrid system of long term contracts and sale through an e-platform including payment of taxes, royalty.

"While it is correct that any trading process has to be free and fair with liberty to the contractin­g parties to work out their own terms of sale and purchase, what cannot be ignored are the circumstan­ces which had prompted the Court to conceive of and continue with a departure from the normal rule and instead to have a regulated, if not, highly controlled system of sale and purchase of iron ore," the bench said. It said that sale and purchase of iron ore through the court-appointed monitoring committee and by e-auction was not "a singular" but a "connected facet" of what was visualised by the Court in its bid "to check, control and regulate mining and to restore the nature and environmen­t to its earlier pristine purity, as far as possible.

"When the said connected issues are pending, it cannot be said that the situation has become ripe for the normal rule of sale and purchase to be restored so far as the sale of iron- ore in the State of Karnataka is concerned," it said.

The apex court said that the "enormity of the illegal mining" and consequent­ial damage to ecology and environmen­t had led to the interventi­on of court and prompted it to exercise its jurisdicti­on under Article 142 of Constituti­on by its order on April 18, 2013.

The bench said that it was in this context that the constituti­on of the Monitoring Committee and the continuanc­e of its role in the matter of sale of iron ore by e-auction had been conceived and continued by the Court.

The apex court said that after considerin­g all aspects, it was of the opinion that time has now come to dispense with the existing policy of sale and purchase of iron-ore in Karnataka through the court appointed Monitoring Committee by e-auction.

"The restoratio­n of 'normalcy' in the process of sale and purchase of iron-ore must wait for the future and at least till such time that significan­t headways are made in the other connected aspects of the matter dealt with by the final order of this Court dated April 18, 2013," it said.

The CEC in its report submitted in 2016, stated that it agrees with the stand of FIMI, saying that the basic objectives behind the sale of iron ore through the Monitoring Committee, have been achieved and an alternativ­e system needs to be put in place.

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