Sealing to resume in the New Year

Express News Service Posted: Dec 25, 2008 at 2345 hrs
New Delhi Bound by court ruling to start sealings as NCT Act expires on Dec 31, MCD to approach Centre to renew moratorium till Dec 2010

The ghost of sealings will be back to haunt Delhi in the New Year. With the National Capital Territory of Delhi (Special Provision) Act expiring on December 31, 2008, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi will resume sealing operations from January 1.

The matter was discussed at the MCD’s Standing Committee meeting on Wednesday. In a last-ditch effort to prevent the sealings, the Bharatiya Janata Party-led MCD decided to approach the Centre to renew the moratorium for another two years, till December 2010.

The Delhi Special Law-2007, passed by the Union Urban Development Ministry on March 31, 2007, had provided a temporary relief to all commercial units running out of residential areas. It had also brought respite for the unauthorised regularised colonies and farmhouses in the Capital.

In March 2007, when the court passed the sealing order, the Delhi government had taken a plea that they were in the process of regularising the unauthorised colonies and hence could not carry out sealings simultaneously. The government had also assured the court that the Delhi Master Plan 2021 would be ready by December 2008 and that the status of all commercial, residential, regularised and unauthorised colonies would be clear by then.

In these 21 months, the state government and the Centre were to complete the master plan and submit its status report in court. But with neither the plan ready yet, nor the report submitted, the MCD, bound by the court’s ruling, has no option but to resume the sealing operation after December 31.

Standing Committee chairman Vijendra Gupta, however, is not ready to toe the line. “The government is not ready with the master plan yet. It is the duty of the government to ensure that the people of Delhi do not face the threat of sealing again,” Gupta said at the Standing Committee meeting.

He insisted that the government should pass an ordinance that the MCD would not carry out any sealing in the city. “Even if it is contempt of court, we will not carry out the sealing drive,” said Gupta.

He said it was the time for the government to act. “It should give us a reply instead of sitting over the files,” said Gupta.

MCD Commissioner K S Mehra, however, contradicted Gupta’s statement. “We will have to go with the law. We will act on the orders of the court,” he said.