Hindustan Times (Delhi)

HC says street vendors can’t be allowed to block roads

SPACE CONSTRAINT A bench of Delhi HC said genuine vendors should be protected

- Press Trust of India htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Roads and pavements in the national capital cannot be allowed to be blocked by hawkers, but genuine street vendors would be protected, Delhi high court said on Thursday.

A bench of justices GS Sistani and Vinod Goel made it clear that if the scheme of the Street Vendors Act, 2014, was not allowed to work, the court will remove all protection­s granted by it.

“No genuine hawker will be removed, but no illegal hawker will be spared. Genuine persons may have been granted protection, but we will not allow roads to be blocked, whether vendors are genuine or not genuine,” the bench, which has been especially constitute­d to deal with street vendor matters, said.

If one looks at any road or area such as Lajpat Nagar or Karol Bagh in the national capital, “traffic is not moving because vendors are on the roads,” it said.

“Roads are bursting to the seams everywhere. There is no place to put another vendors. Everywhere in Delhi we cannot see a single pavement. Barring Lutyen’s zone, every pavement is full. If there is a fire, so many people could die,” it said.

The lawyers representi­ng the street vendors contended that they should not be blamed for congestion on roads and it was because of illegal parking of vehicles.

Disagreein­g with the claim, the bench said if hawkers take up the parking spots, then where will people park.

The court warned that the vendors should allow the Act to be implemente­d and if they challenge the law, the rules and schemes framed thereunder, then the stay order would be withdrawn.

The bench, thereafter, directed the registry of the high court to list before it all the matters relating to street vendors.

It said it will take up all the matters on December 9, the next date of hearing.

The court was hearing pleas filed by Congress leader Ajay Maken and others, who said the Delhi government had failed to prepare a scheme in consultati­on with Town Vending Committee as per the Act, to conduct a survey of the number and location of vendors, even when the law clearly envisaged that till such a survey is completed, no street vendor shall be evicted or relocated.

 ??  ?? The high court said that traffic is not moving on the roads because vendors are occupying space illegally. HT FILE PHOTO
The high court said that traffic is not moving on the roads because vendors are occupying space illegally. HT FILE PHOTO

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