The Free Press Journal

Finally, green signal for Western Dedicated Freight Corridor

The Maha-UP corridor has been stalled for two years over land acquisitio­n

- URVI MAHAJANI urvi.mahajani@fpj.co.in Full report on www.freepressj­ournal.in

The Bombay High Court has cleared the way for initiating work on the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor (WDFC) between Maharashtr­a and Uttar Pradesh (UP). The project has been stalled for over two years due to a petition filed by Jiten Agro Land and Farm Pvt Ltd, and its directors, whose 2.5-hectare land in Panvel was acquired for it. Dismissing the petition, the court said the petitioner­s have been unnecessar­ily delaying a project of public interest.

Observing that “there is no report of worth which could be relied upon to hold that the said project is being taken forward upon damaging the environmen­t”, a division bench of Chief Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Girish Kulkarni observed, “From the factual narrative, it is quite clear that all requisite permission/clearances have been applied for and obtained…” The court also observed that no illegality has been demonstrat­ed by reference to any relevant provision of law. The judges said: “It is not a rare experience that whenever a project in public interest is conceived and measures are taken for acquisitio­n of lands, objections start flying in from all corners. The challenge posed by the petitioner­s was no different…”

The court observed that there was a need for “balancing the competing interests” of protecting one’s property from unlawful/wrongful acquisitio­n and the need to acquire private property for a public purpose. “After all, the state’s right of eminent domain cannot be ignored and subject to compliance of all safeguards for acquisitio­n of property, the former interest has to yield to the latter,” added the HC.

As per a notificati­on issued in July 2011, the government acquired part of the petitioner­s’ land in Panvel under the provisions of the Railways Act, 1989, for the execution, maintenanc­e, management and operation of WDFC. The Ministry of Environmen­t and Forests (MoEF) granted clearance in 2014 and permitted cutting of some mangroves.

In 2015, the project had to be realigned due to practical difficulti­es and had to proceed along a 12.5 km of detour alignment. As a result, the government acquired an additional 0.8240 hectares of the petitioner­s’ land. A new notificati­on was issued in July 2015 by the authoritie­s, whereby the petitioner­s’ land was acquired.

Jiten Agro filed a petition challengin­g the notificati­on and acquisitio­n of its land. During the hearing in 2019, the court restrained the government from going ahead with the project till the decision in the petition thereby stalling the project.

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