MUMBAI: Bombay high court on Wednesday set a time limit of October 31 for 1,200 families of Partition refugees to vacate their dilapidated structures in Sardar Colony, Guru Tegh Bahadur Nagar.
A division bench of Justices Abhay Oka and Riyaz Chagla rejected a plea by means of residents of 21 of 25 structures who had sought a 12 months to vacate their apartments. The bench gave the residents a month to file an undertaking that they are going to shift by means of the time limit. The court mentioned the residents were staying in dilapidated structures at their very own possibility and Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) would now not be accountable if the construction collapses. The court informed the Mumbai collector to come to a decision on an utility by means of residents in 2014 for redevelopment of the structures.
Advocate Anand Jondhale, recommend for Vijay Punjab housing society, had steered the court to provide the residents time till the top of the instructional 12 months to transport out. “Children are in the midst of the instructional 12 months. It might be difficult to acquire admissions in different faculties,” mentioned Jondhale however the court rejected the plea.
The court’s directive to the authorities to come to a decision on redevelopment offers hope to the residents. Jondhale had claimed that the families could be rendered homeless if they were pressured to vacate without any assurance about plans to redevelop the structures. In 2014, some residents had implemented to the collector for a no-objection certificates for redevelopment of the 25 structures.
The structures were constructed within the past due 1950s on land belonging to the state govt to accommodate refugees from West Pakistan to Mumbai after the Partition of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan in 1947.
Based on technical advisory committee file, BMC on May 7 issued demolition notices saying the lives of 6,000 individuals within the structures and those of passers-by were in peril. The file had concluded the structures could collapse any time. Of the 25 structures, the court had asked for a contemporary inspection of 4.
A division bench of Justices Abhay Oka and Riyaz Chagla rejected a plea by means of residents of 21 of 25 structures who had sought a 12 months to vacate their apartments. The bench gave the residents a month to file an undertaking that they are going to shift by means of the time limit. The court mentioned the residents were staying in dilapidated structures at their very own possibility and Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) would now not be accountable if the construction collapses. The court informed the Mumbai collector to come to a decision on an utility by means of residents in 2014 for redevelopment of the structures.
Advocate Anand Jondhale, recommend for Vijay Punjab housing society, had steered the court to provide the residents time till the top of the instructional 12 months to transport out. “Children are in the midst of the instructional 12 months. It might be difficult to acquire admissions in different faculties,” mentioned Jondhale however the court rejected the plea.
The court’s directive to the authorities to come to a decision on redevelopment offers hope to the residents. Jondhale had claimed that the families could be rendered homeless if they were pressured to vacate without any assurance about plans to redevelop the structures. In 2014, some residents had implemented to the collector for a no-objection certificates for redevelopment of the 25 structures.
The structures were constructed within the past due 1950s on land belonging to the state govt to accommodate refugees from West Pakistan to Mumbai after the Partition of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan in 1947.
Based on technical advisory committee file, BMC on May 7 issued demolition notices saying the lives of 6,000 individuals within the structures and those of passers-by were in peril. The file had concluded the structures could collapse any time. Of the 25 structures, the court had asked for a contemporary inspection of 4.
1,200 families told to vacate bldgs by Oct 31
Reviewed by Kailash
on
July 05, 2018
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