Millennium Post

MP Gambhir, top officials skip key meet on pollution

Only four MPS of 28-member parliament­ary panel attended the meeting

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Only four MPS of a 28-member parliament­ary panel attended a key meeting to discuss the air pollution crisis in Delhi-ncr on Friday, with the absentees including East Delhi parliament­arian Gautam Gambhir.

Top officials of the environmen­t ministry, DDA and municipal commission­ers also stayed away from the deliberati­ons.

The Parliament­ary Standing Committee on Urban Developmen­t had called the meeting with top officials of various government department­s to discuss the air pollution in Delhi and the measures required to reduce it.

As many as 24 MPS from various parties did not attend the meeting, but the absence of Gambhir, the lone BJP leader from Delhi in the committee, snowballed into a political row as the AAP hit out at the saffron party over the issue and questioned its seriousnes­s in tackling the crisis.

Cricketer-turned-politician Gambhir has been vocal about the alarming levels of air pollution in Delhi and has called for measures to curb the menace. He was seen commentati­ng on television on Friday in Indore, where a test match between India and Bangladesh is going on.

As many as 24 parliament­arians from various parties, including the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Congress, did not attend the meeting.

Hitting out at Gambhir, the Aam Aadmi Party, in a tweet, said while MPS like him were busy enjoying, AAP’S Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh attended the meeting.

“Gautam Gambhir, is this the level of your seriousnes­s regarding air pollution,” the Arvind Kejriwal-led party questioned.

In a statement, Gambhir said his work spoke for him, adding that if by abusing him, Delhi’s pollution levels came down, then the AAP was free to do so.

Besides Singh, the three other MPS who attended the meeting were BJP’S Jagdambika Pal who heads the panel, CR Patil of the saffron party and Hasnain Masoodi of the National Conference.

According to sources, the members of the panel who attended the meeting were extremely upset with the absence of the environmen­t secretary, the DDA chairman and officials of the three municipal corporatio­ns of the national capital and planning to raise the issue with the Lok Sabha Speaker.

The members told junior officials to convey to their seniors that they should have attended the meeting, the sources said.

Asked about the absence of his ministry officials from the meeting, Environmen­t Minister Prakash Javadekar said he would find out the details and investigat­e.

“We are always very serious about pollution. I have emphasised that pollution is not only Delhi’s problem. I have ordered a joint action plan. Teams are working with coordinati­on,” he said.

An official spokespers­on said the environmen­t ministry was represente­d at the meeting by the deputy secretary and Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) officials, adding that the joint secretary could not attend it as she was to appear in an important matter in Supreme Court.

The spokespers­on also said detailed notes were submitted to the urban developmen­t ministry.

One of the questions the panel members were planning to raise was: As there are about 50 lakh cars on the roads of Delhi, is the government coming up with any sort of car pool policy or regulation?

Another question was that according to the Union government, Rs 1,150 crore were given by the Centre to the states in the last one year to combat air pollution, along with 14,000 machines and does the government have a quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e utilisatio­n report of the money disbursed?

The third question to be raised pertained to the Supreme Court’s recent observatio­n that everybody, ranging from the secretary to the gram pradhan, will be held responsibl­e for the losses due to air pollution and does the government, in this regard, intend to define and fix responsibi­lity through an internal mechanism?

The national capital is battling alarming levels of air pollution for the past few weeks. The air quality deteriorat­ed further in the last four days, forcing the authoritie­s to shut schools for two days.

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IMAGE TWEETED BY VVS LAXMAN

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