Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Park not safe, forum had warned civic body

- Sabah Virani sabah.virani@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: Barely two months before four-year-old Arjun and five-year-old Ankush were found dead in an open water tank in the BMC’S Maharishi Karve garden in Wadala West on Monday, the Wadala Citizens Forum had complained to the civic body about the condition of the park. The group had taken issue with the poor lighting, the dilapidate­d roof of a gazebo, and a low wall that allowed unnoticed entries, compromisi­ng the park’s safety.

“We met the ward officer Chakrapani Alle, and sent him a complaint letter on January 31,” said a member of the forum. “The inadequate lights in the park made it extremely unsafe post-sundown. Also, children and adults would jump over the low wall to escape the notice of the two security guards. The BMC shared that wall with the estate department, so the officers would say it wasn’t possible to increase the height.”

The member added that whenever locals complained to the BMC, officials would say they had budget constraint­s. “In the last meeting with the ward officer, he had instructed other officials to look into our complaints, but nothing changed,” she said. “An official told us she had written to BEST for more light poles, but our inputs on where the poles were needed were not taken, nor was the letter shared.”

Before Covid-19, the resident had complained about drug users occupying the unused toilet in the park. After former ward officer Gajanan Bellale inspected the site, it was demolished, and the issue subsided. Parts of the wall were also raised to prevent rouge entries, and a rear gate closed.

The surfacing of these old complaints have added to the din calling for justice for the children, who were from the utensilsel­ling Waghri community.

Ravi Raja, former Congress corporator, said that an FIR needed to be filed against the contractor and BMC officials in charge of the park. “The BMC should also give the family compensati­on,” he said. “When Dr Deepak Amrapurkar died in 2017 from falling into an open manhole, there was an immediate uproar. Just because this family is poor, nothing is being done.”

The petition and Bombay high court proceeding­s filed after Dr Amrapurkar’s death could possibly give the family grounds to claim compensati­on for the children’s death, said Ruju Thakker, who had filed the petition and is considerin­g approachin­g the court regarding the children’s deaths. “As per the judge’s order, the municipal commission­er will be held responsibl­e for the case of loss due to open manholes. Alongside this, an FIR should be filed holding the BMC officials liable,” she said. An officer from Matunga police station said they would be filing an FIR under Section 304 A against “unknown officials responsibl­e for the park’s maintenanc­e” by Tuesday night.

Kishore Gandhi, deputy municipal commission­er in charge of gardens, said that a contractor had been entrusted with the maintenanc­e of the park. “An inquiry will be held to figure out whose lapse it was that led to the water tank being left uncovered,” he said. “Based on that, action will be taken.”

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Four-year-old Arjun and five-year-old Ankush died after they fell into a water tank inside the garden on Sunday
HT PHOTO Four-year-old Arjun and five-year-old Ankush died after they fell into a water tank inside the garden on Sunday

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