Millennium Post

Centre wants 2015 notificati­on on licensing of theatres to be withdrawn: Delhi LG to HC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The office of the Lieutenant Governor (LG) on Wednesday told the Delhi High Court that the Centre has instructed it to withdraw a notificati­on issued in 2015 by which licences to cinema halls were to be granted by deputy commission­ers of revenue department and not the police.

The matter assumes importance for two reason. Firstly, it pertains to the tussle between the LG and the ruling dispensati­on in Delhi with regard to administra­tive control of the national capital. Secondly, under the notificati­on licences were to be granted by the deputy commission­ers on the recommenda­tion of a nodal agency and not by the licensing department of Delhi Police.

In an affidavit placed before a bench of Chief Justice Rajendra Menon and Justice V K Rao, the office of LG Anil Baijal has said that the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) had sent a letter on January 1, 2019 asking it to withdraw the notificati­on, which was issued in 2015 and challenged in the high court by an associatio­n representi­ng cinema hall owners in the national capital.

The affidavit also said the MHA’S decision was communicat­ed by the LG’S office to the Chief Secretary of Delhi on January 9, 2019 to take necessary action.

The letter dated January 1, 2019, issued to the LG’S office by the MHA said the ministry after obtaining the legal opinion of two senior law officers has decided that the notificati­on of January 9, 2015 be withdrawn.

The Delhi government, represente­d by its Additional Standing Counsel Gautam Narayan, said it will be filing an affidavit on the issue as soon as it is cleared by its law department.

The court, thereafter, allowed all the parties, including Associatio­n of the Victims of Uphaar Tragedy (AVUT), to file their response to the affidavit filed by the LG’S office and listed the matter for further hearing on April 12.

AVUT, represente­d by senior advocate Vikas Pahwa, said withdrawal of the notificati­on was contrary to the law.

The associatio­n’s chairperso­n Neelam Krishnamoo­rthy said on the sidelines that under the notificati­on the licence would be issued only on the recommenda­tion of the nodal agency which would have one person each from the police, fire services, municipal corporatio­n and other concerned authoritie­s and therefore, there would be no need for obtaining individual clearances from each of these statutory bodies.

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