Millennium Post

Cleared 148 acres of encroached forest land: Delhi Govt to SC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Delhi government informed the Supreme Court on Wednesday that it has cleared 148 acres of encroached forest land in the national capital.

The counsel appearing for Delhi government told a bench of justices Madan B Lokur and Deepak Gupta that it would file an affidavit giving full details of the actions taken to re-claim the encroached land and also about the water bodies.

On the point of issuing advance notice of sealing to defaulters, Additional Solicitor General (ASG) ANS Nadkarni, appearing for the Centre, said they have discussed the matter with senior advocate Ranjit Kumar, assisting the court as an amicus curiae, and they would finalise an agreed plan.

"We had a discussion and some agreed procedure will be finalised," the ASG said.

The bench said it would hear the issue on September 20.

It also granted two weeks' time to the Delhi government to file their affidavit in the matter. The apex court had earlier taken serious note of the encroachme­nts in Delhi and had said it was a "matter of great distress" that 2,280.43 kilometres of roads, streets and footpaths were encroached upon in the national capital.

The observatio­n by the bench had come after it was informed that 844.33 kms, 811.01 kms and 601.2 kms of encroached roads and streets were cleared by the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (NDMC) and those in South and East Delhi respective­ly as on August 31.

The bench had made it clear that once the special task force (STF), constitute­d on April 25 following the court's order to oversee enforcemen­t of laws on illegal constructi­ons here, clears the encroachme­nts, the statutory authority would have to ensure that there was no more encroachme­nt in the area.

The court had also dealt with issues relating to encroachme­nt of forest land and water bodies here which was raised by the court-appointed monitoring committee in its report.

The committee had told the court that several water bodies in Delhi had dried up and were encroached upon, which was a matter of grave concern.

The apex court had in July directed that there would be "no stopping of sealing or demolition" of unauthoris­ed constructi­ons in Delhi after the Centre had said it had not given any instructio­ns to the civic bodies to go slow or stop the sealing drive against offending structures.

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