Number plates a must for VVIP vehicles, rules Delhi high court
There can be no manner of doubt that every vehicle has to... be registered with a registering authority DELHI HIGH COURT BENCH
NEWDELHI: Snubbing the VVIP culture, the Delhi high court on Wednesday said all vehicles plying on the streets, including those of top dignitaries such as the president, vice president, governors and lieutenant governors should be registered and display number plates. A bench of acting chief justice Gita Mittal and justice C Hari Shankar said every vehicle has to comply with the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and display the number plates. It directed the Centre and the Delhi government to check that all the vehicles are registered and have licence plates.
The court’s order came in response to a plea by Nyaya Bhoomi, a non-government orgaabsence nisation, through its secretary Rakesh Agarwal, which alleged that the display of the national emblem on official cars, instead of the number plates, makes them conspicuous and expose dignitaries to potential threats.
The plea also contended that a person meeting with an accident involving a car without a registration number cannot bring a claim against it; due to the of any identification mark, the vehicle’s ownership cannot be known and citizens get the message that if a dignitary could disobey the law and get away with it, so could they.
“There can be no manner of doubt that every vehicle has to comport to the Motor Vehicle Act and has to be registered with a registering authority and must display the registration number,” the court said on Wednesday.
Appearing for the ministry of road, transport and highways, central government standing counsel Rajesh Gogna informed the court that the offices of the president, vice president, governors and lieutenant governors have been told to ensure that vehicles used by them are registered according to the rules.