The Asian Age

Land given for building of 40- yr- old tent school

■ HC told DDA has cleared way for constructi­on of minority institutio­n

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The Delhi high court was on Monday informed by the DDA that it has allotted land to the AAP government for constructi­ng building for a minority school, which has been running in tents since its demolition over 40 years ago during the Emergency.

A two- judge bench of acting chief Justice Rajendra Menon and Justice V. K. Rao was told that a plot of 4,000 square metres has been allotted by the Delhi Developmen­t Authority ( DDA) for the constructi­on of the school in Old Delhi.

The bench noted that the competent authority had in principle granted approval for constructi­ng the secondary school at Eidgah at Quresh Nagar in the walled city. It disposed of the petition after the petitioner expressed satisfacti­on over the developmen­t. The court had last year asked the Delhi government and the authoritie­s concerned to explore the possibilit­y of allotting land for the minority school.

It had asked the Delhi chief secretary to coordinate with all agencies, including the DDA and the municipal body.

The court, which was hearing a PIL seeking reconstruc­tion of the school building, had expressed concern after it was told that the minority institutio­n has been functionin­g from tents since its demolition on June 30, 1976 during the Emergency.

The PIL filed by civil activist Firoz Bakht Ahmed had contended that the state of affairs at the Qaumi School was “sad and pitiable” as it was functionin­g from the ground of the Eidgah at Quresh Nagar in Old Delhi after its building was demolished. The petition had alleged that despite promises of land and building, nothing was done and the school continued to function in a “tattered, tented and tinned structure, without a building” since 1976. The PIL, filed through lawyer Atyab Siddiqui, had contended that children from the “downtrodde­n and backward classes have to suffer due to threats of closure, makeshift classrooms, leaking roofs and no proper facilities. “A hostile and inclement environmen­t can hardly be conducive for learning.”

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