Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

MPs, officials skip key House panel meeting

- Jayashree Nandi and Anonna Dutt htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com ■ With inputs from Vatsala Shrangi, Risha Chitlangia, Baishali Adak

NEW DELHI: The parliament­ary committee on urban developmen­t was forced to defer its meeting on air pollution in Delhi-NCR because most Members of Parliament and heads of civic and infrastruc­ture agencies didn’t turn up. When contacted, they said they were busy at other events.

About six MPs attended the meeting of the parliament­ary committee on urban developmen­t, which has 29 members.

Commission­ers of MCDs, heads of DDA and DJB did not attend the meet.

The deferment snowballed into a political slug fest with AAP members accusing BJP members of not taking the issue seriously. Among the missing lawmakers was Gautam Gambhir, the BJP’s East Delhi MP. He was seen eating sweets when former cricketer VVS Laxman tweeted photos from Indore.

NEW DELHI: As Delhi choked with an Air Quality Index (AQI) of 458, the fourth consecutiv­e day when air quality breached the “severe” category, the parliament­ary committee on urban developmen­t was forced to defer its meeting on air pollution in Delhi NCR because most Members of Parliament and heads of civic and infrastruc­ture agencies simply didn’t turn up.

When contacted, they said they were busy at other events.

The job of the parliament­ary committee on urban developmen­t, which has 29 members, is to carry out a detailed scrutiny of urban infrastruc­ture and housing related issues.

The meeting scheduled on Friday was for MPs to be briefed by the representa­tives of the ministry of housing and urban affairs on the role of the municipal corporatio­ns of Delhi, Delhi Developmen­t Authority, Central Public Works Department and National Buildings Constructi­on Corporatio­n in reducing air pollution in Delhi and NCR, according to the Lok Sabha website. It was an opportunit­y for elected representa­tives from around the country to grill various agencies on the poor air in the capital.

The deferment of the meeting snowballed into a political slug fest with Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) members accusing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members of not taking the issue seriously.

AAP spokespers­on Raghav Chadha, tweeted: “This shows criminal negligence and apathy towards air pollution issue. All these bureaucrat­s should be suspended with immediate effect and proceeding­s should be initiated against BJP MPs who bunked.”

Gautam Gambhir, BJP MP from Delhi, who skipped the meeting tweeted: “My work will speak for itself! P.S Agar mujhe gaali dene se Dilli ka pollution kam hoga to AAP jee bhar ke gaali dijiye cc: Trolls (If slamming me helps solve Delhi’s air pollution then please do so wholeheart­edly). In a tweet by former cricketer, VVS Laxman, Gambhir was seen eating jalebis for breakfast in Indore on Friday morning.

Jagadambik­a Pal, chairman of the committee, said he did not want to comment on why the meeting was cancelled.Pal himself attended it, though. His office later said about six MPs attended the meeting but commission­ers of MCDs, heads of DDA and DJB didn’t attend the meet. Since the meeting did not take place, attendance was not registered.

South Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (SDMC) Commission­er, Gyanesh Bharti, explaing his absence, said: “It was the budget presentati­on for the coming financial year (2020-21) in South MCD today, and I had to be here (in the Standing Committee meeting of the Corporatio­n) to do that.”

The East Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (EDMC) Commission­er, Dilraj Kaur, said, “I am unwell and hence couldn’t attend.” North municipali­ty commission­er, Varsha Joshi, said: “I am at a session on walkabilit­y at the Urban Mobility Conference at Lucknow, which the Delhi Developmen­t Authority (DDA) vice chairman is chairing.”

CK Mishra, secretary, ministry of environmen­t, said: “They had asked us for some inputs, which we have given them. I am away for some work.”

A senior DJB official said: “We had a pre-scheduled board meeting today, which cannot take place without the CEO. We had deputed officers for the Centre’s meeting.”

DDA vice chairman, Tarun Kapoor, said: “I’m in Lucknow for the urban mobility conference organised by the housing and urban affairs ministry. DDA’s engineerin­g member and commission­er planning had gone for the meeting on my behalf.” MPs also had similar excuses. “Unfortunat­ely, I could not attend the meeting today. There was another meeting in my constituen­cy,” said Abdul Majeed Ariff, a CPI(M) MP from Alappuzha, Kerala.

“I am sorry, I could not attend the meeting today, I had some event in my constituen­cy in Kerala,” said Behanan Benny, Congress MP from Chalakudy, Kerala.

“I was out of Delhi, the mother of one of our party members passed away and I had to go for the last rites,” said Ramcharan Bohra, BJP MP from Jaipur, Rajasthan.

“I was there, but there was no meeting. Only four of the 29 members, including the chairperso­n, were present. Even the officers from the MCD, NDMC, none of the commission­ers or even representa­tive from the ministry of environmen­t were present. The subject and the agenda had been notified earlier. It was well known but we don’t know why people did not turn up,” said Hasnain Masoodi, National Conference MP from Anantnag, Jammu and Kashmir.

“We were informed about this discussion on pollution just four or five days back, but the event in my constituen­cy had been planned long ago. Also, if the matter was so important, why not discuss it on November 18, when everybody would have been in Delhi. Not everybody lives in Delhi or in cities like Kanpur nearby. I would have had travel to Delhi for today’s meeting, come back on the 16th and then head back to Delhi on the 17th. My constituen­cy will not have me for a month, I need to finish all my work here. You are in Delhi so for you the matter of pollution is of paramount importance, for me the problems of my constituen­cy are of paramount importance,” said Kalyan Banerjee, MP from Serampore, West Bengal.

A senior official of the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) said he had sent a junior official because the rest were busy with a Supreme Court case on air pollution.

The Lok Sabha secretaria­t issued a notice on November 8, alerting members about the meeting on November 15. “This indifferen­ce is unfortunat­e. Health emergency of this magnitude calls for their immediate attention and engagement to prioritise and drive solutions,” said Anumita Roychowdhu­ry, executive director, Centre for Science and Environmen­t.

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