Millennium Post

SC raps Govt for not implementi­ng directions issued 26 years ago

The Apex Court in 1991 had asked Centre to make ‘Environmen­t Science' a compulsory subject in college and school curricula

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday rapped the government for not implementi­ng its 1991 directions including making 'Environmen­t Science' a compulsory subject in college and school curricula.

"You (Centre) are a party which is just not bothered. You have constitute­d a committee (for implementa­tion of SC orders) which has never met," a bench comprising Chief Justice J S Khehar and Justices D Y Chandrachu­d and S K Kaul said when the counsel for the Centre sought some more time.

The bench said though a committee has been set up, it has not met so far and nothing has been done to implement the directions issued 26 years ago.

However, the bench acceded to the request of Additional Solicitor General (ASG) P S Patwalia, appearing for the government, and adjourned the hearing on the plea of environmen­talist M C Mehta for hearing on March 6. Earlier, the ASG had apprised the court that the Centre has constitute­d a Core Committee comprising a Chairman and four other Members to monitor and review matters relating to the implementa­tion of directions issued in its order passed on November 22, 1991 on Mehta's PIL.

The bench was hearing an interim plea of Mehta alleging that the directions passed in 1991 on his PIL have not been complied with letter and spirit and had asked the Centre to apprise it on what steps could be taken to ensure that the curricula include 'Environmen­t Science' as compulsory subject.

The ASG had said that the state boards, responsibl­e for deciding school curriculum, functioned under state administra­tions and hence cannot be forced by it to do the needful.

In the 1991 verdict, a bench headed by then Chief Justice Rangnath Misra had said "the UGC will take appropriat­e steps immediatel­y to give effect to what we have said, i.e. requiring the Universiti­es to prescribe a course on environmen­t. They would consider the feasibilit­y of making this a compulsory subject at every level in college education.

"So far as education up to college level is concerned, we would require every state Government and every Education Board connected with education up to matriculat­ion or even intermedia­te colleges to immediatel­y take steps to enforce compulsory education on environmen­t in a graded way. This should be so done that in the next academic year, there would be compliance of this requiremen­t."

Besides making ‘Environmen­t Science' a compulsory subject, it had then passed a slew of directions including an order to “cinema halls, touring cinemas and video parlours to exhibit free of cost at least two slides/messages on environmen­t in each show undertaken by them”.

Disposing of the PIL in 1991, the bench had asked the Centre to issue appropriat­e directions to state government­s and Union Territorie­s to “invariably enforce as a condition of license of all cinema hails, touring cinemas and video parlours” to show slides on environmen­t free of cost.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India