Saturday, September 21, 2019

Forwarding of allegation/petition of Sri Ganga Behera & others of Kapatapalli Panchayat of Nuagaon Block under Nayagarh District regarding implementation of Forests Rights Act, 2006.

                                                                                                                                      Date: 26/11/2012

To 
The commissioner cum Secretary ST and SC development Dept.
Govt. of Odisha Bhubaneswar.


Subject: Regarding alienation of tribal land and common lands forcefully doing plantation and encroachment and recognition of Community Forest Rights.

Dear Sir,

We the undersigned 38 villagers of Nuagaon Block of Nayagarh District bring to your kind attention of the apathetic situation created for alienating our individual as well as common land upon which we have been critically depending for our livelihood.

1. That we the permanent residents of Kapatapalli GP of the said block would state that the Non-tribal people from village Gumi, Bahadjhola and Bhaliadih of Nuagaon block and individuals from bordering Ganjam district have taken away our land and recorded in their name through allurement and fraudulent means. Those non-tribal people have been doing massive cashew plantation and earning huge money from our land. Despite having protective legislation to protect tribal lands and common property resources how the records of those lands are changed in the non-tribal. Some information relating to individual lands are annexure herewith.

Since Nuagaon Block is a MADA area drawing special attention for the poor tribals, the issue of land is most critical for the livelihood of our poor tribals special care should be given to resolve these longstanding gradual alienation of our land and common resources(CPRs).

This is in gross violation of section 22, 23, 23A of Odisha Land Reforms Act 1960 which says that "any transfer of a holding or part thereof by a raiyat, belonging to a ST shall be void except unless-(a) a person belonging to a ST or (b)  a prior permission is taken in writing for such transfer from Revenue officer in case of non-ST". We are also not aware about the process of which lands have been alienated. 

We pray for necessary investigation to reveal the facts and appropriate measures to restore the land and livelihood of our poor tribals.

2. That we have been cultivating over the lands, since our forefathers time, classified as forests in the previous(Sabik) settlement held in 1962 ( Under the then Puri district). Such a situation is prevalent in almost all the villages. We were collecting the forest produces available in those lands, which in the subsequent period converted cashew field through plantation by Revenue Dept, which deprived the community from access and collection of forest products they were collecting traditionally. The cashew field has been auctioned by Cashew Development Authority to powerful vested interests; ignoring the stake and dependency of poor villagers. Presently, we have applied for Community Forests Rights under "the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act 2006 " in all the villages. Therefore, we request the government to recognize and vest the community forest rights over those lands covered with cashew plantations and other forest resources under FRA.

3. That we were deriving our livelihood from grazing and agriculture over our village common lands since generations. Here the government did plantation of cashew and the officials assured us to enjoy the fruits by guarding and protecting them. However, in subsequent period cashew field was given lease to the outside business traders. So we the tribal tenants have been deprived from our traditional access to common resources and cashew field, which was assured to us during plantation.

As per the order of Honourable Supreme Court of India on dated January 28, 2011, Civil Appeal No.1132/2011 @ SLP (C) No.3109/2011, common land cannot be settled against the influential individuals or vested interests except the most vulnerable ST, SC or other marginal families. The court has directed to hand over the common lands to the Gram Sabha / Gram Panchayat for safeguarding and managing them. However, such law has not been used so far in the ground.

We, therefore, demand for handing over of the common property to the Gram sabha as directed by the Hon. Supreme Court.

The above issues are not limited to the Nuagaon block, rather widely prevalent in other tribal-dominated places of Nayagarh district.

We, therefore, request you to take necessary and immediate action to restore and secure the individual land as well as common lands of the people.

Yours faithfully,

Ganga Behera, Somanath Behera and other villagers of Kaptapalli Panchayat.







https://www.fra.org.in/document/36214,%20Nayagarh.pdf



Tuesday, September 10, 2019

The Shamlat lands of Punjab


P.S. KRISHNAN

Print edition : September 13, 2019


Punjab has the highest proportion of Scheduled Caste (S.C.) people in the country (31.9 per cent). In rural areas, S.Cs account for 37.46 per cent. No community has been listed as Scheduled Tribes (S.Ts) in Punjab.

Punjab is one of the States with the lowest proportion of landowning Dalits. As per NSSO (66th Round) data, in Punjab only 4.3 per cent of rural S.C. households are self-employed in agriculture, compared with as high as 54 per cent among rural SAC/NSCTBC households. The proportion of agricultural labour households among rural S.Cs is 34.5 per cent compared with 7.5 per cent of SACs/NSCTBCs. As many as 94.2 per cent of S.C. households in Punjab do not have any land for cultivation compared with 36.5 per cent of SAC/NSCTBC households (Socially Advanced Classes/the non-S.C., non-S.T., non-Socially and Educationally Backward Classes). S.C. households with 2.01 to four hectares of land are a mere 0.6 per cent, compared with 18.4 per cent of SAC/NSCTBC households. No S.C. household in Punjab has more than 4 hectares, compared with 10.6 per cent among SACs/NSCTBCs. These data show that while the all-India gap between S.Cs and SACs/NSCTBCs is wide, it is wider in Punjab.

Among the avenues available for reducing the landlessness of Punjab’s Dalits is the utilisation of Shamlat lands (village common lands) available for cultivation. Reportedly, as per the State government’s records, a total of 1.57 lakh acres (one acre is 0.4 hectare) of Shamlat lands is available for cultivation in the State. Of this, about one-third, or nearly 53,000 acres, is reserved for S.Cs and given on annual lease to them.

Efforts are being made by a number of gram sabhas of panchayats which are dominated by members of the dominant landowning castes to dispossess S.Cs even of lands reserved for them. In Tolewal, Thandiwal and Mulowal villages of Sangrur district, the panchayats have reportedly resolved to auction Shamlat lands reserved for Dalits and extract unaffordably high lease amounts from them, which will make it impossible for Dalits to hold on to these lands.

Influential people encroach upon and grab Shamlat lands despite the Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1953 (Punjab Act No. 1 of 1954), amended in 1961, and the Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Rules, 1955, amended in 1961 and 1964. Recently, landless Dalits have begun to rise in protest against such practices. An organisation known as the Zamin Prapati Sangharsh Committee (ZPSC) has come up championing the cause of joint farming by Dalits on panchayat lands. However, a permanent solution for this is for the State government to grant the entire 1.57 lakh acres of Shamlat lands available for cultivation to S.Cs of the respective villages, with full ownership and patta/title deed. When it is recognised that these lands are available for cultivation purposes, there is no need to give them out on annual leases. The cruelty inflicted upon the Dalits of Punjab since long deserves reparation. This land grant will be part of such reparation. The government should also provide group minor irrigation for these lands.

If necessary, additional grants can be provided to panchayats for the income lost hitherto from leasing of Shamlat lands. Dalits should be encouraged to farm these lands jointly with high-value crops, agricultural and if possible horticultural. In the case of horticultural crops, which will have to be tended over a long gestation period, the Dalit grantees themselves can be engaged to provide labour on these lands on wage basis under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA). The ZPSC and other organisations working for Dalits should be fully associated with these efforts.

The existing legislation must be amended to the extent necessary to release Shamlat lands for granting them to Dalits with clear ownership. Chief Minister Amarinder Singh should take personal interest in this and get this done.

https://frontline.thehindu.com/social-issues/social-justice/article29268747.ece

Friday, September 6, 2019

CRZ Land Allotment to Mahindra Holidays is illegal


June 2 , 2018

Former union secretary and noted environmentalist Dr EAS Sarma decried the allotment of 20 acres of CRZ land in Kalingapatnam, a coastal village in Andhra Pradesh, in favor of  Mahindra Holidays & Resorts India Ltd. He said it is illegal and highly objectionable.

Andhra Pradesh government, which has been in the thick of controversies over indiscriminate allotment of land to investors in recent past, has again allotted 20 acres of expensive land, classified as ‘unsurveyed coastal poramboke’ for the development of ‘Club Mahindra Beach Resort Project’.

A GO has been issued on May 31,2018

However, the allotment has been questioned by noted environmentalist and former government of India secretary EAS Sarma.

Writing a letter to D Sambasiva Rao, special chief secretary Ananta Ramu, secretary, department of Environment and MK Meena, Secretary, tourism, Government of Andhra Pradesh, Dr Sarma demanded that the GO issued on May 31, 2018 be revoked. He also warned that he would be constrained to seek judicial intervention if the orders were not revoked.

The reasons Dr Sarma cited to prove that the allotment of CRZ land to develop beach resort is illegal are here:

  1. No building construction is permitted within CRZ limits as per the CRZ Notification issued by Union Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MEFCC). Within CRZ limits, no borewells can be permitted.  This has been made clear in the order dated 6-7-2007 in WP No 8177/2007 & order dated 8-10-2-12 in WP No 169/2012 of Hon’ble AP High Court.
  2. The land in question being a poramboke land within CRZ has considerable ecological significance. Such lands cannot be given away to any private party as per the order dated 28-1-2011 of Hon’ble Supreme Court in Civil Appeal No 1132/2011, a copy of which is enclosed.
  3. The Poramboke land in question serves common public purposes. Matsyanarayana Swamy temple that is worshipped by the fishing community is located on that land. Apparently, the local officials have pressurised the village community to say that they have no objection to shifting the temple to accommodate the luxury resort of MHRIL. This signifies the height of crony capitalism that seems to guide the political executive at present but it also shows the insensitivity of the government to the importance and the sanctity of a temple worshiped by the fishing folk and the political executive’s munificence to a private luxury resort meant for catering to the affluent sections of the society.
  4. The value of the land, as per the basic value disclosed at the website of the State Registration Dept is Rs 58 lakhs per acre (the real market value is much higher), whereas the government orders indicate the rate at which it is being given to MHRIL to be only Rs 15 lakhs per acre. To give away a valuable government land to a profiteering private company at a rate 1/4ththe basic rate disclosed by the Registration Dept amounts to outright corruption that attracts the penal provisions of the Prevention of Corruption Act. In the 2-G spectrum case, the apex court had clearly cautioned the government not to dole out precious natural resources at rates lower than the market value.
Reminding senior officials that it is incumbent upon the  civil servants  like them “to resist such prima facie illegal land allotments that hurt the public interest”, Dr Sarma warned them  that “failing to do so will drag you into penal proceedings”.

Sarma was surprised that the State’s political executive should run roughshod over the State’s resources while the civil servants have chosen to acquiesce!



Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Tamil Nadu Fined 2 Crores For Delay In Removing Encroachments In Chennai


A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel slammed the Tamil Nadu government over poor pre-monsoon preparedness and asked its Public Works Department to deposit the amount within 15 days with the Central Pollution Control Board.

Chennai| Press Trust of India | Updated: November 10, 2018 08:03 IST

New Delhi: The National Green Tribunal has slapped a penalty of Rs. 2 crore on the Tamil Nadu government over the inordinate delay in removal of the encroachments along and prevention of pollution of Adyar and Cooum rivers in Chennai.

A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel slammed the state government over poor pre-monsoon preparedness and asked its Public Works Department to deposit the amount within 15 days with the Central Pollution Control Board.

The tribunal directed the Tamil Nadu Chief Secretary to look into the matter directly and ensure that the steps are taken on an urgent basis in the interest of the environment and the people.

"On perusal of the reports of the Principal Secretary, Public Works Department, Tamil Nadu, we find that it is replete with vagueness and no instances of tangible action taken for mitigation of the problems having been stated. In so far as the work on the Buckingham Canal is concerned, it appears to have been taken under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission Scheme and only administrative sanction for estimated amount of Rs. 603.67 crore appears to have been obtained. That apart, we find action taken for pre-monsoon preparedness for the years 2017 and 2018 have been placed at an estimated at the cost of Rs. 70 lakh and Rs. 80.50 lakh respectively but the works undertaken appears only to be removal of floating materials," the bench said.

The green panel said that the report on removal of the encroachments was equally disappointing as it states that out of total 26,300 encroachments taken together, only 408 have been evicted leaving the balance of 25,892 encroachments still to be dealt with.

The NGT refused to agree with the submission that the delay in the removal of encroachments was due to pending litigations and said the "answer is absolutely vague as no particulars have been furnished as regards the number of the encroachers who have approached the courts and its present status".

 The tribunal's order came while hearing a bunch of pleas relating to pollution of Adyar and Cooum rivers in Chennai and Buckingham Canal.

The plea alleged that there was uncontrolled discharge of effluent from different industries and untreated sewage directly into the water, besides encroachment on the banks of the rivers by construction of different structures.



https://www.ndtv.com/chennai-news/tamil-nadu-fined-rs-2-crore-over-delay-in-removal-of-encroachments-along-chennai-rivers-1945152


Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Remove encroachments from water bodies: Rajasthan HC


TNN | Updated: Mar 12, 2019, 14:16 IST 


Jaipur: A division bench of Rajasthan High Court on Monday said that chief minister of Rajasthan is expected to prepare a project aiming at recharging of water bodies , checking deforestation and illegal mining. 

The bench comprising Justice MN Bhandari and Justice BL Sharma while hearing suo motu petition on the revival of Ramgarh Dam , which was once a lifeline for Jaipur , directed the state government to remove all the encroachments from pasture land and water bodies in  villages and sought a compliance report in three weeks.

"It is expected from the chief minister of Rajasthan to prepare a project aiming at checking deforestation , illegal mining and recharging of catchment areas, " the bench observed.

Bench also asked the state government to ensure that directions issued by the court on May 29,2012 have to  be followed. Court during then had issued directions including removal of encroachments from Ramgarh dam area , a remote sensing  survey to find out if any allotment were made around water resources , and if any allotments are found they should be cancelled,water resources department should not allow construction of anicuts without survey , policy to be framed for recharge of catchment area and increase forest area , district level committee to comply with orders and state level central monitoring committee including legal experts , catchment areas having encroachment to be identified and removed , no NREGA work near flowing area of water bodies, residential colonies should not be developed near water bodies, revenue department should maintain water bodies,water resources department should work as nodal agency to remove encroachments , monitoring committee should regularly file its reports , and government should file interim action plan.

During the hearing court observed that no effective measures were taken by the state government to remove encroachments from catchment areas of water bodies. "The pollution control board should take effective action to ensure water bodies may not get polluted. Rajasthan has got biggest area in the country and no compliance of court orders is seen. The state government needs to take the matter of illegal mining and encroachment near catchment area seriously and accountability of officers should be fixed , " the court observed.

Court has also asked people to refrain from approaching revenue court and subordinate court if they find any discrepancies in upkeep of water bodies but allowed them to approach high court . JDC, T Ravikant , Nagaur collector and Ajmer collector were present at the court.





 https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/jaipur/remove-encroachments-from-water-bodies-hc/articleshow/68365737.cms



Thursday, August 15, 2019

300 bighas of grazing lands freed from encroachment in Sarwar block of Ajmer, Rajasthan

Source: Punjab Kesari, 26/07/19 

Sarwar (Om Prakash Acharya) : The block administration removed encroachments from 300 bighas of  grazing land in Birla village of Sarwar tehsil in Ajmer, Rajasthan.  The Tehsildaar found 23 people guilty and  sentenced them to 3 months of imprisonment for illegal occupation of 300 bighas of grazing land.

Birla village has around 224 hectares of Charagrah land, 50 hectares of which was encroached  upon for cultivating crops. A couple of people had also fenced some parts of the grazing land and built temporary shelters.

The encroachment of grazing land was causing problems for the  livestock and the village community had been requesting the local officials for removing the encroachments.

 Source: Punjab Kesari

Saturday, August 10, 2019

Civic bodies told to make list of encroachments on government land in Punjab

Posted at Aug 6 , 2019 , 7:24 AM : last updated : Aug 6, 2019 ,10:35 AM (IST)

Balwant Garg
Tribune News Service 
Faridkot, August 5

After Sunam MLA Aman Arora flagged encroachments on government land across the state, the Director, Local Bodies, has asked all municipal corporations, committees, councils and Nagar panchayats to submit a list of such properties and names of persons in possession of these properties. 

The civic bodies have been asked to submit details of properties encroached upon. 

In his questionnaire, the Sunam MLA also asked the state government to provide details of any provision or process underway for removing the encroachments. The MLA also sought to know from the state government whether or not it has any plans to regularise the encroachments. 

"Encroachments on government land have been a contentious issue in this area. A list of encroachments has never been compiled nor any effort taken to remove illegal occupation," said Sadhu Ram, president Lok Manch, Kotkapura. 

Properties of civic bodies are covered under the definition of public premises under Section 2(e) of the Punjab Public Premises Land (Rent and Recovery) Act, 1973, and encroachments on lands can be removed under the Act. 

Besides encroachments on the land of municipalities, there is a proliferation of religious shrines that become footholds for illegal settlements. there are also many cases of land grabbing where illegal squatters have encroached on footpath and pavement.

"Most of the encroachers take the plea that land on which their buildings were built were never in possession of the municipalities and they had become the owner of the land by purchasing it from another person. The reality is the municipality is the absolute owner of its land even if it has not taken its possession," said a senior functionary in Municipal Committee Kotkapura.


https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/bathinda/make-list-of-encroachments-on-govt-land-civic-bodies-told/813604.html


Saturday, August 3, 2019

Meeting organized for waste land and grazing land development in Karauli

26 July 2019 22:07 PM | Karauli, Rajasthan

Karauli Live

Meeting of wasteland and grazing land development committees was held under the chairmanship of District Collector Abhay Kumar Meena. The meeting was held at the Rajiv Gandhi Jan Facilitation Centre.

In the meeting, the District collector gave directions to the chairman and members of the grazing land development committees for the development and protection of grazing lands. He further ordered the formation of pasture development committees at the block and village level, organizing their meetings every 2 months and mapping and demarcation of the pasture lands in the villages.  All officers were instructed to coordinate and take up planting activities in the pasture and barren land.

In the meeting, Chief Executive Officer, Navaratna Koli apprised everyone of the Government's instructions about the development of the pasture land through MGNREGA. The meeting was attended by the District President, District Development Officer, Chairmen of the grazing land development committees and members and government officials of the district.



https://circle.page/post/854888?utm_source=amp&utm_medium=more&utm_campaign=amp

Friday, August 2, 2019

1,742 hectares of gauchar land under encroachment


TNN | Updated: Jul 24, 2019, 12:08 IST

GANDHINAGAR: The state government admitted in the house on Tuesday that about 2,560 hectares of Gaucher land were encroached in the state. Of this, the government has removed encroachment from 764.37 hectares of land, while another 1,742.07 hectare of land is still encroached .

The government said that it has not formed any gauchar encroachment cell, but there is a district encroachment department which is taking care of gauchar encroachments.

During the discussion, Independent MLA from Vadgam Jignesh Mevani alleged that the government had allotted guachar land to many SEZs. He alleged that there has been encroachment on gauchar land in Jamnagar, Bhavnagar among other places as well. The state government admitted in the state assembly that it has given 13.44 crore sq meters of gauchar land, government wasteland and even government land either on rent or has sold the same for industrial development.

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Important submission to the Chief Minister of Haryana on Gauchar Bhumi [29.06.2019]


June 29, 2019

To
Hon’ble Chief Minister
Haryana
Subject: GAUCHAR BHUMI IN HARYANA-SOME IMPORTANT SUBMISSION FOR YOUR GOODSELF

Sir,
Most respectfully, it is submitted as under:
1. a) ‘Gauchar Bhumi Development Board’ should be established on the pattern of Gujarat to have optimum utilization of such land. For this, advise from National Fodder Research Institute, Jhansi may be taken.
b) District-level committees/ Local commission should be formed to monitor such land. Even Justice Katju of Supreme Court has also ordered for constant monitoring.
c) Tribunal should be set up by Hon’ble High Court on the pattern of Panjab to monitor irregularities and eviction of such land. Gauchar Bhumi (The term includes all Gaucharand, Charand, Grazing Land, Pastures, Meadows)

2. Haryana State in 1992 has changed the definition u/s 2(g) of ‘Shamlat Deh’ as defined originally in Panjab Village Common Lands Act, 1961 by including the term ‘Charand’ into it which is against the spirits of ‘shart vajib ul arz’ and ‘chakbandi’ (scheme istemal). ‘CHARAND’ should not be included in ‘Shamlat Deh’ and it should have its separate entity.

3. All common land of village earmarked as ‘Gauchar Bhumi/Charand’ as per ‘shart vajib ul arj’ (1908-10 and later on) and ‘Chakbandi’ (Scheme istemal) (1948-52 and later on) should be evicted of all illegal encroachments by way of following steps:
a) Fast track courts
b) Panchayati Raj Act, 1994 (sec 24)
c) Haryana Public Premises Act, 1972 (sec 4,5,7,8)
d) Panjab Village common Lands Act, 1961 (sec 7(2))
e) Panjab Gurdwara Act (Can be evicted within 45 days) (Panjab Act No. 4 of 1998) 25.1.98
f) IPC Sec 447
g) As per Supreme Court judgements
I. Jagpal Singh & others v/s State of Panjab & others Civil appeal no. 1132/ 2011 decided on 28.01.11 by Justice Markandey Katju
II. State of Jharkhand & others v/s Pakur Jagran Manch & others Civil appeal no. 436 of 2011, decided on 12.01.11 by Justice R.V. Raveendran & Justice H.L. Gokhale.
Following the apex court’s decision, there have been 5 high court orders admitting cases against taking over of village commons or rescinding such takeovers. 29 judiciary pronouncements and 29 government orders on commons have been issued since the apex court order. Rajasthan govt. is bringing a bill in legislative assembly and this was part of CM budget speech in 2011-12. It has already ordered to panchayats in the matter like Maharashtra govt.
Already Chief Secretary, Haryana has written letter to all DCs vide Letter no. SBA1-2012 (42918-38) dated 02.08.2012 in this regard and Principal Secretary, Development & Panchayats Department, Haryana has also written letter to all DCs vide letter no. SBA-4/2013/27542-562 dated 20.05.13.

4. The letter no. SBA-4/2013/27542-562 dated 20.05.13 from Principal Secretary, Development & Panchayats Department, Haryana to all DCs as mentioned above gives an indication that Government is thinking in terms of changing the ‘Land use’ of Gaucharand/Charand by considering the Cattle population of the village and revenue loss of the gram panchayats. Gaucharand/Charand should not be used for any other purpose.

5. There are instances that Gaucharand/Charand land is being used for carving 100 sq. yards plots for weaker sections. As part of vote bank politics in Panchayat elections, Sarpanchs/Panchs pass resolutions in the name of BPL. It has come to notice that already 3000 out of 6155 gram panchayats have passed such resolutions under undue influence. 75% of such plots are expected to be sold later on.
We request you to cancel all such resolutions passed in last 6 months of a panchayat and allot such plots to weaker sections, if any, out of other shamlat lands available in the village. As cattle are not the weaker but the weakest and speechless segment of the society.

6. The Gaucharand/ Charand land presently in possession of Gram panchayat or coming under possession after eviction of encroachments should not be given on ‘Patta’ or ‘Theka’ (Contract or Lease) for cultivation or construction or for any purpose other than grazing. Generally, Sarpanchs/ Panchs dole out such favors to nears, dears, high and mighty. Haryana Gau Aayog should be party to all auctions of grazing lands by panchayats and lease money so received should be spent on live stock only.

7. Optimum utilization of Gaucharand/ Charand land
a) At least (4-5) Cow Sanctuaries cum Rural Development Center should be established covering (4-5) districts each, wherever large chunk of such land (exceeding 500 acres) is available, which will help in breed development of cow and holistic rural development. There are huge chunks of such land available in Thaska village (Hisar), Panipat, Matanhel village (Jhajjar), Yamunanager, Jind etc.
b) Where there is ‘Unfertile’ Gaucharand/ Charand land exceeding 10 acres available,‘GOSADANS’ should be established. Government can give financial assistance to such Gosadans towards fixed, capital and immovable expenditure like boundary wall, shed, office, godown, water works etc.Whereas recurring and movable expenditure will be met by gram panchayat, villagers, NGOs and Gaushalas etc.
c) Where there is ‘Fertile’ Gaucharand/ Charand land is available, this can be used for fodder for the cattle of the village and Gosadan. Triveni trees can be planted. Barbed fencing can be erected and notice board of ‘No trespass’ can be installed to discourage any encroachment.

8. Rule 3(2) of PVCL Act, 1961 mentions 28 types of applications for which Shamlat Deh land can be used. We request you to include ‘Gaushala, Gauvigyan and Sanvardhan Kendra’ also as 29th item.
We further request you that such land be given to Gaushalas etc on 33 years lease@Rs. 1/- per year per Acre under Rule 6(5), wherever Gram Panchayats are willing to do so.

Some other suggestions:

9. Hon’ble Panjab and Haryana High Court order dated 31.07.08 to the government to give Rs. 15/- per cow per day should be implemented. Delhi govt. is already paying Rs. 25/- per cow per day to gaushalas. Rajasthan has allotted 125 crores to Gaushalas recently.

10. All registered gaushalas currently operating in Haryana should be given ownership rights so as to avail grant from Pvt./Govt./Semi Govt. agencies.

11. There should be a complete ban on unconventional and illegal use of cattle feed (eg Tuda, Sarson, Bhusa. Neera, Guar etc.) in Brick kilns and paper & cardboard factories u/s 144 of act.

12. All gaushalas should be given Wheat Straw Reapers free of cost on the basis of Sirsa district.

13. There should be a session trial in Fast Track Courts for all acts of illegal cow transportation under Cow Slaughter Act on the pattern of Rajasthan.

14. The vehicle used in such illegal cow smuggling should be confiscated as done in liquor smuggling cases.

Hoping for a sympathetic response from your good self.

Yours faithfully,
Rakesh Aggarwal.
(ex-member of Haryana Gau Ayog )

A Goan village is on the brink of victory to conserve a century-old lake



 Posted by Pamela D'Mello on 21 June 2019

 A community is actively pursuing the conservation of a Portuguese-era hilltop lake in north Goa.
The reservoir lies in a high-value real estate area which is being eyed by developers for construction projects.
In the latest progress, the citizen’s efforts have led to a consultation that will potentially declare the hilltop natural reservoir as a wetland, protecting it with a buffer zone.

On a rainy day last week, June 12, as cyclone Vayu was pelting rain on Goa, 400 villagers braving inclement weather, gathered at a community hall. They were there for Goa’s first consultation on the potential declaration of a hilltop natural reservoir, as a wetland. The consultation, called by the Goa State Wetland Authority was a hard-fought victory by villagers of Santa Cruz, a suburban area adjoining Goa’s capital Panjim. For the past decade, the people of Santa Cruz had tried every avenue to save their villages’ crowning glory, Bondvol Lake, a 110-year-old natural reservoir that collects rain and spring water over a 9.365-hectare submergence basin. Citizens have been actively pursuing their demand. They have held bike rallies, public meetings, mobilized special gram sabhas, taken awareness treks for school children, filed complaints, accompanied flying squads, photographed and videographed violations and dug into historical archive material to back their court petitions as well as lobbied with panchayat, politicians, and state government offices.
Since 2009, construction firms and land grabbers had stealthily damaged the lake’s drainage (sluice) valves, in a bid to dry out the lake and usurp the land. The natural forests around the lake were surreptitiously felled and kutcha (temporary) roads leading to the lake were constructed at the hilltop site, while goons posted at the site, scared off birders and other common citizens from approaching the lake area.

A community’s heritage

“Bondvol lake is officially owned by the local Calapor Comunidade (an ancient village land-owning institution in charge of common village lands). My great grandfather was one of the original gaonkars (villagers) that helped construct the lake. It has unique natural hydrology that collects rainwater from the hills that surround it on three sides. And on the fourth side, the villagers fortified an earthen embankment. In 1910, colonial authorities put in a valve and a spillway was created to irrigate the fields in the surrounding area,” said Calapor Comunidade attorney Peter Gonsalves (60).
Gonsalves made an impassioned plea to save the lake, at the June 12 consultation, “You can construct buildings. But water is a precious resource, and where we have it, we have to preserve it.”
In 2017, the Calapor Comunidade had moved the Bombay High Court’s Goa bench to seek protection for Bondvol Lake. Another citizen, Arturo D’Souza also filed a public interest petition in the High Court at the same time. While other villagers moved the National Green Tribunal.
“We, the villagers have decided that we will do what it takes to save our community asset, the Bondvol Lake,” said architect and teacher Elsa Fernandes (48).
Villagers became aware of the land mafia mischief at Bondvol, around six years ago, when they observed, using Google imagery, how the lake had degraded and depleted over the years. “Twenty-five years ago the lake was filled to the brim, with 15-meter-high water levels. Bondvol is located on top of a difficult-to-access dense forested hill, in a pristine environment. We knew the level was dropping, but nobody knew why. It was later that we realized it was manmade sabotage. The spillway was damaged and stones and mud in the embankment were being removed and fruit trees were being planted on the embankment itself, so the roots could further damage the dam,” said Fernandes.
A “Save Bondvol Lake” movement got traction in the 6,100-household village in 2016. Alert citizens noticed roads and construction firms gearing up to construct apartments on the lake’s periphery. While on its drying up the bed, a single-tenant was readying to usurp a vast track of the lake’s bed and convert community property to private ownership.
“We petitioned several government authorities, but had to finally approach the court for justice in 2017,” said petitioner Arturo D’Souza.
The High Court ordered the Water Resource Department to repair and refit the lake’s sluice valve. This provoked a community celebration at the site, with young and old turning up in numbers to witness the event. A year later, another celebration was held by villagers, when even in the hottest month of May, the restored valve saw the lake naturally rejuvenate itself. “Earlier, by November end, water would deplete. But last year, there was two meters of water even up to May end,” said Fernandes.In November 2017, the high court set up a task force to enumerate forest trees and demarcate a 200-meter area around the lake for a no-development buffer zone from the water’s edge.

Claiming back their environment

Pressure from villagers saw construction projects for row houses slowly move away. The movement petitioned the collector’s office against felling of trees obtaining a ‘stop work’ order against prominent builders. The last hurdle, villagers say is the claim by a single tenant over large areas of the lake bed. “We think it is illegal”, said Fernandes. The claim though is a case study of how  land mafias have grabbed village common lands and Comunidade land, misusing tenancy laws and backed by politically-connected land lobbies, she opined. What was earlier a tenancy lease from the Comunidade for just four months of the year, on a 550 sq m lot on the upper slopes of the dried out lake for a December-May third cropping season, got permanently formalized by lower courts through ex parte hearings. Finally, attempts were being made to usurp 21,000 sq m of the lake bed, misusing tenancy laws.
Land owning Comunidades were financially and politically hollowed out by post-1961 governments. In 1979, Comunidade members asked the water resource department to maintain the lake. But the WRD’s attempt to conserve the lake in 2009, was thwarted by a court injunction from the sole tenancy claimant. In the controversial pro-realtor 2011 Regional Plan, the area was zoned as settlement, with the construction industry readying to move in. A push back from citizens saw the area now zoned as environment heritage in the 2021 Regional Plan.

The final step for declaring Bondvol as a wetland complex

With the sluice valve repaired, and villagers now vigilant, the Save Bondvol Lake movement is hopeful the waterbody will be declared as a wetland ecosystem, to gain additional environmental protection for their community asset. The June 12 consultation was the first step. But villagers are worried that tenant claimants could still block the wetland declaration, through written submissions before the Wetland Authority Board.
The conservation of Bondvol was backed by the February 2018 Task Force on Bondvol Lake report. This underscored its qualification not just as a wetland in itself, but as a wetland complex, along with its downstream water bodies and conduits. The Task Force endorsed taking an ecosystem approach for Bondvol, mapping trees, shrubs and grasses and calling for the protection of the forested slopes outside the NDZ in the 2 square kilometer catchment area of the lake as well.
“We have our fingers crossed,” said Arturo D’Souza, as the Goa State Biodiversity Board conducts the seven days hearing of objections, before preparing and placing the Brief Document for its declaration as a wetland ecosystem before the state board for approval.

Article published by Aditi






[1] The above news clipping is not related to the judgement on commons ,(Civil Appeal No. 1132/2011 @SLP(C) No. 3109/2011 ) however it has been added here due to its relevance to Commons .

Monday, May 13, 2019

Mr. Pankaj Babulal Kotecha Vs Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai & Ors.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY

PUBLIC INTEREST LITIGATION NO. 6 OF 2013 (03/08/18)



1. This Petition has been filed in public interest. The Petitioner is an Indian citizen, resident of Mumbai City. The Petitioner has sought directions against the Respondents to demolish the illegal construction that has been done on the subject plot i.e. CTS No. 417, at Khajuria Tank Road, Kandivali by filling in the 100 years old Khajuria Lake (referred to incorrectly as “Khajuria Pond” in this Petition) and for restoration of the Khajuria Lake. The Petitioner has also sought a necessary direction to the Chief Secretary, the State of Maharashtra for conducting an enquiry into the unauthorised and illegal expenditure for the illegal construction on the subject plot and to take action in accordance with law against the erring officers, public representatives and recover the amount from them as well as initiate prosecution against all concerned.

2. The Petitioner had on 6th September 2012 come across a report in the Times of India that the Khajuria Lake situated at Kandivali (West) which is more than 100 years old was illegally filled in by the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation. The Petitioner claims to have made enquiries from which the Petitioner claims to have learnt that the illegal construction was done at the behest of one Shri. Yogesh Sagar, a member of a political party when he was a local Councilor and who is now a Member of the Legislature Assembly from the constituency where the said Khajuria Lake is situated. The Petitioner claims that the illegal construction was done in collusion with the Respondent No. 1­Corporation and another Corporator Shri. Baldev Singh Manku. The Petitioner has stated that when he visited the Khajuria Lake, it was completely filled and a garden has been constructed on the subject plot. The Petitioner states that illegal construction on the subject plot was done without taking permission of the Collector. The Bhoomi Pujan of the garden was done in the year 2010 and thereafter, a musical water fountain was constructed there. The municipal garden was opened on the subject plot in December 2011.

3. The Petitioner has stated that the said Khajuria Lake originally belonged to Vithaldas Mathurdas and other heirs of Khimji Vallabdas Trust Estate and was given to them by the Government in return for their land near old Kandivali Station.

4. The Petitioner has stated that the said Lake now belongs to the Collector and this is reflected in the 7/12 extract and 6/12 extract. The Petitioner further states that the news of filling of the said Lake has appeared in other newspapers and the Petitioner has relied upon the same. The Petitioner states that the Khajuria Lake was used for immersing Ganesh idols during Ganesh Festivals. The said Lake also contained various types of rare fish, tortoise and different types of birds used to come to the mangroves existing therein. It is the Petitioner's case that the Talathi has visited the said Lake and a panchanama was done. The Talathi appears to have also been surprised at the filling of the said Lake as this has been done without any permission taken.

5. It is the Petitioner's case in the Petition that there are no documents reflecting the handing over of the subject plot to the Respondent No. 1­Corporation. The Petitioner states that the subject plot to his knowledge was not handed over to the Respondent No. 1­Corporation and despite which the illegal construction has been carried out with public funds. The Petitioner has also addressed a representation to the concerned authorities, but no action was taken against the unauthorized construction. It appears from the Petition that it came to the Petitioner's knowledge under the Right To Information Act, 2005 that the original owners of the subject plot had addressed correspondence to the Tahasildar, Borivali, Mumbai and Shri. Yogesh Sagar, the then Councilor bringing it to their notice that the original owners had objected to filling up of the said Lake which is a natural Lake. The Petitioner has also obtained documents which revealed that the Superintendent of Garden of the Respondent No. 1­Corporation had appointed vide letter dated 10th April 2008, M/s. Techno Treade Impex India Pvt.Ltd. as the municipal contractors with respect to a tender issued on 8th February 2008 allotting the said Lake for being converted into a garden. It appears from a noting dated 16th February 2009 issued by the Assistant Commissioner, R/South Ward that the provision of allocation of Rs. 5 Crores and more in the year 2008-­09 had been made by the Municipal Corporation with respect to conversion of the said Lake into garden and Amphi Theatre. It appears from these documents that no objection was obtained by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation from the Collector for the purpose of converting the said Lake to that of a municipal garden and Amphi Theatre. The Chief Engineer, Development Plan and the Chief Accountant (Finance) has been joined as the Respondents No. 5 and 6 since their office was responsible for converting the said Lake into garden. Since no action had been taken against the illegal construction on the subject plot, the Petitioner has filed this Petition in public interest. Rule has been issued by this Court on 25th November 2015. This Petition has thereafter, come up for final hearing.

6. Shri. Havnur, the learned Counsel appearing for the Petitioner has submitted that the illegal construction viz. theconversion of the said Lake to a municipal garden had beendone by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation in connivance with the MLA Shri. Yogesh Sagar and to the detriment of the public at large. He has submitted that the said Lake belongs to the Collector and that such construction could have been carried out provided the Collector gave permission for the same. He has
submitted that although in the Development Plan, the subject plot was shown as Recreation Ground (R.G.), conversion of the said Lake into a garden could not have been done by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation in connivance with the local Corporator by taking advantage of this reservation. He has submitted that public funds have been used for the conversion of the said Lake and this has been done by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation contrary to public interest. The said Lake was used for immersing Ganesh idols during the Ganesh Festivals. He has submitted that the said Lake was in existence for over 100 years and various types of rare fish, tortoise lived inside the Lake and different types of birds visited the said Lake, as there were mangroves in existence. He has submitted that from the documents on record, it appears that an application had been made to the Collector by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation for handing over of the subject plot, but this was only for beautification of the said Lake and not for conversion of the said Lake into a municipal garden. He has relied upon the judgment of the Supreme Court in Jagpal Singh Vs. State of Punjab, wherein the Supreme Court has observed that the use of Ponds which are for the common benefit of villagers of the village cannot be auctioned for private use by the Authorities/Grampanchayat officials and that the lands should be restored for the common use of villagers of the village. He has also relied upon the judgment of this Court in Avinash Laxman Kandalgaonkar Vs. the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai & Ors , wherein this Court came done heavily on the Municipal Corporation and the Corporator for failing in their duty of constructing a municipal primary school on the plot for which it had been reserved and held them to be answerable to the public as to why they had used public money for construction of a jogging park which was impermissible keeping  in view the reservation. He has also relied upon the judgment of this Court in Edwin Britto and another Vs. The State of Maharashtra and others , wherein this Court has held that it is an obligation of the State to ensure that the lakes must continue to exist and the Apex Court has held that the forests, tanks, ponds, hillock, mountain are the material resources of community and nature's bounty which maintain delicate ecological balance. He has thus, submitted that such illegal construction by filling the said Lake can in no circumstance have been permitted by the Collector to whom the subject plot belonged.

7. Shri. Wadgaonkar, the learned Counsel appearing for the Respondent No. 1­Corporation and the Respondents No. 2 to 8/Authorities of the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation has made his submissions in support of the impugned action of the Respondent No. 1­Corporation. Shri. Milind More, the learned AGP appearing for the Respondents Nos. 9, 9A to 9F –State and its Authorities has also supported the impugned action of the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation. The learned Counsel appearing for the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation has submitted that the Collector had given post facto sanction dated 10th February 2014 on the terms and conditions mentioned therein for beautification of the subject plot and its development as a theme park by the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation. He has submitted that the subject plot has been reserved for R.G. He has submitted that it was necessary to develop the said Lake as the public used to throw garbage in the said Lake and the said Lake had lost its beauty. He has submitted that the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation had not filled up the entire Lake, but had only beautified the subject plot by keeping the said Lake at the center with aquarium. He has submitted that the post facto sanction granted by the Collector was only pursuant to the several attempts made by the Respondent No. 1 ­Corporation to transfer the said Lake for its development and beautification. He has relied upon the Affidavits which have been filed by Shri. H.A. Khairmode, the Assistant Engineer (Maintenance) on behalf of the Respondents No. 1 to 8 dated 3rd July 2013 and the additional Affidavit filed by Shri. Jagdish Rajabhai Rathod, the Deputy Superintendent of Gardens of the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation dated 28th June 2018 in support of his submissions. He has denied the Petitioner's contention that the said Lake was a heritage property. He has submitted that there is no change of user as the subject plot had been reserved for R.G. and the same has been put to use as per the designated user. He has submitted that by developing the subject plot, the need of the larger section of the public had been catered to. He has therefore, submitted that in the light of post facto sanction for development of the subject plot granted by the Collector, there is no merit in the Petition.

8. The learned Additional Government Pleader for the State has relied upon the Affidavit of Shri. Rajendra Kshirsagar, Joint Secretary, Revenue and Forests Department, the Respondent No. 9­State in support of his submission that the State had given post facto sanction for development of the subject plot by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation, as the subject plot was reserved as “R.G.” in the Development Plan. He has submitted that the subject plot was transferred to the Respondent No. 1­Corporation, pursuant to the post facto sanction being granted for beautification of the said Lake at the subject plot on the terms and conditions mentioned in the post facto sanction dated 10th February 2014. He has submitted that the subject plot bearing C.T.S. No. 417 is the same as Survey No. 124 mentioned in the post facto sanction dated 10th February 2014 issued by the State Government. He has submitted that as the State Government has given post facto sanction for beautification already done by the Respondent No.1­Corporation, the construction of the subject plot cannot be considered to be illegal as alleged of the Petitioner.

9. We have considered the submissions. It has been a consistent stand of the Respondents that there existed a Talao (Lake) on the subject plot. The documents which are on record including the Punchnama prepared before the Talathi and executed by the resident of Khajuria Tank Road as well as noting issued by the Assistant Commissioner, R/South Ward dated 27th November 2008 refer to Lake on the subject plot. The letter dated 30th June 2009 addressed by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation to the Collector calls upon the Collector to issue no objection for the purpose of converting the Khajuria Talao to that of a municipal garden and Amphi Theatre. Further, in the 7/12 extract which has been annexed to the Affidavit of Shri. Kshirsagar for the Respondent No. 9­ State, the word “Talao” is mentioned as existing on the subject plot. In the post facto sanction of the Respondent No. 9­State dated 20th February 2014 which is also annexed to the said Affidavit, the word “Talao” is mentioned and that post facto sanction was being granted in respect of the beautification of the Talao on the subject plot which had already taken place. It is thus, clear from the documents that there existed a Lake on the subject plot. The Lake has been destroyed by the Respondent No. 1 ­Corporation filling up the said Lake and converting it into a municipal garden.

10. We do not accept the submissions of the learned Counsel appearing for the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation that there was no change in the user of the subject plot and/or that the subject plot was only beautified by keeping the Lake at the center with the aquarium. We have perused the photographs tendered during the course of the hearing and we find that what is described by the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation as a Lake appears to be only a fountain and the rest of the said Lake has been filled up and converted into a municipal garden. We find that the post facto sanction granted by the State Government on 10th February 2014 was specifically for the beautification of the said Lake subject to the terms and conditions mentioned therein. One of the terms and conditions being that there shall be no change in the use of the land or otherwise the land shall be transferred to the State Government. The Respondent No. 1­Corporation by converting the said Lake to a municipal garden has breached the condition of the post facto sanction granted by the State Government. We further find from the contentions in the Petition and documents on record that one Shri. Yogesh Sagar, MLA was responsible for the conversion of the said Lake into a municipal garden in collusion with the Respondent No. 1­Corporation and that an amount of over Rs. 5 Crores of public money was used for the construction of the municipal garden.

11. We find that in the revenue records which includes the property card annexed to the Affidavit of Shri. Kshirsagar, for the State, the subject plot is shown as belonging to the State Government and this would include the Lake which is mentioned to have existed on the subject plot. The said entries have presumptive value.

12. Under Section 22 of the Maharashtra Regional and Town Planning Act, 1966 the contents of a Development Plan is provided and amongst the contents what is to be noted is Sub­ Clause (i) of Section 22 which reads thus:­ “preservation of features, structures or places of historical, natural, architectural and scientific interest and educational value [and of heritage buildings and heritage precincts” In the present case the subject plot is shown in the Development Plan as “R.G.”. However, the State Government is enjoined with a duty to preserve features of natural interest and of historical value viz. the said Khajuria Lake. Merely because there is a reservation of R.G. provided, it does not authorise the State to destroy the Lake.

13. This duty of the State can be inferred from the Chapter of Directive Principles of the State Policy viz. Article 48A of the Constitution of India, which provides thus:­“The State shall endeavour to  protect and improve the environment and to safeguard the forests and wild life of the country.”

14. Further, under the same Chapter Article 51­A Sub ­Clause (g) provides that it shall be the duty of every citizen of India “to protect and improve the natural environment including forests, lakes, rivers and wild life, and to have compassion for living creatures”. It is thus, equally the duty of every citizen of India to protect forests, lakes, rivers and wild life, which are essential for a natural environment.

15. The Supreme Court in Jagpal Singh Vs. State of Punjab (supra) in paragraphs 20 and 23 held thus:­ “20. Over the last few decades, however, most of these ponds in our country have been filled with earth and built upon by greedy people, thus destroying their original character. This has contributed to the water shortages in the country. Also, many ponds are auctioned off at throw away prices to businessmen for fisheries in collusion with authorities/Gram Panchayat officials, and even this money collected from these so ­called auctions is not used for the common benefit of the villagers but misappropriated by certain individuals. The time has come when these malpractices must stop.
23. Before parting with this case we give directions to all the State Governments in the country that they should prepare schemes for eviction of illegal/unauthorized occupants of Gram Sabha/Gram Panchayat/Poramboke/Shamlat land and these must be restored to the Gram Sabha/Gram Panchayat for the common use of villagers of the village. For this purpose the Chief Secretaries of all State Governments/Union Territories in India are directed to do the needful, taking the help of other senior officers of the Governments. The said scheme should provide for the speedy eviction of such illegal occupant, after giving him a show­ cause notice and a brief hearing. Long duration of such illegal occupation or huge expenditure in making constructions thereon or political connections must not be treated as a justification for condoning this illegal act or for regularizing the illegal possession. Regularization should only be permitted in exceptional cases e.g. where lease has been granted under some Government notification to landless labourers or members of Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes, or where there is already a school, dispensary or other public utility on the land.”

16. The Supreme Court has thus observed that there is illegal auctioning of many Ponds at throw away prices to businessman in collusion with the public authorities/Gram Panchayat and the money collected from such auctions is not used for the common benefit of villagers, but misappropriated by certain individuals. The Supreme Court has therefore, directed restoration of the said land for common use of the villagers.

17. This Court has in Avinash Laxman Kandalgaonkar (supra) in the context of illegal acts done by the Corporators at paragraph 10 held thus :­ “The Corporation or any of its officers or public representative were bound by the reservation which had the force of the law. It was expected of the Corporation to construct the school which has not been done over such a long period of 17 years. In our opinion, both the Corporation and its officers have admittedly failed in discharging their duty towards the public at large. Furthermore, the Corporator concerned exceeded his jurisdiction in spending public funds over construction of beautification of a park or jogging park, which admittedly was impermissible keeping in view the reservation. The Corporation and the Corporator both are answerable to public as to why the public funds were spent for such a purpose and why these funds could not be utilized for construction of the school. May be the construction of the school would require much more expenditure, but surely this could be beginning of a cause of a greater legal significance and larger public interest. We have no hesitation in observing that this was not expected of either of the Corporation nor the Corporator that they would ignore their legal and public duty and act contrary to law just to appease certain people. We are hopeful that the Corporation would ensure that in future public funds are not wasted in this absolutely discretionary manner. Every Corporator is expected to spend the public money for a public cause but in accordance with law.”

This Court has thus held the Corporation and the Corporator to be answerable to the public for public funds being spent for a purpose which was impermissible. The Division Bench of this Court presided over by one of us (A.S. Oka, J) has in Edwin Britto and another (supra) referred to the Directive Principles of the State Policy and the fundamental duty under clause (g) of Article 51­A as well as the law laid down by the Apex Court in Hinch Lal Tiwari Vs. Kamala Devi & Ors.4 which has held that forests, tanks, ponds, hillocks, mountains are nature's bounty which maintain the delicate ecological balance and thus, needed to be protected as these are essential for a healthy environment and for enabling people to enjoy a quality life which is the essence of the right guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution. Accordingly, it was held therein that the obligation is of the State to ensure that the lakes must continue to exist and cannot be filled up for carrying out so called beautification work which leads to their disappearance.

18. The Supreme Court has time and again enunciated the public trust doctrine. A few of these decisions are worth referring to in the present context.

19. The Supreme Court in Intellectuals Forum Vs. State of A.P. whilst invoking the public trust doctrine in a matter involving the challenge to the systematic destruction of percolation, irrigation and drinking water tanks in Tirupati town and by referring to some judicial precedents including M.C. Mehta Vs. Kamal Nath , M.I. Builders Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Radhey Shyam Sahu , National Audubon Society Vs. Superior Court of Alpine County , observed at paragraph 76 thus:­“...This is an articulation of the doctrine from the angle of the affirmative duties of the State with regard to public trust. Formulated from a negatory angle, the doctrine does not exactly prohibit the alienation of the property held as a public trust. However, when the State holds a resource that is freely available for the use of the public, it provides for a high degree of judicial scrutiny on any action of the Government, no matter how consistent with the existing legislations, that attempts to restrict such free use. To properly scrutinise such actions of the Government, the courts must make a distinction between the Government’s general obligation to act for the public benefit, and the special, more demanding obligation which it may have as a trustee of certain public resources.....”

20. The Supreme Court has enunciated the public trust doctrine in the case of Fomento Resorts and Hotels Ltd. Vs. Minguel Martins and at paragraph 55 held thus:­ “55. The public trust doctrine is a tool for exerting 9 (2009) 3 SCC 571 long ­established public rights over short­ term public rights and private gain. Today every person exercising his or her right to use the air, water, or land and associated natural ecosystems has the obligation to secure for the rest of us the right to live or otherwise use that same resource or property for the long ­term and enjoyment by future generations. To say it another way, a landowner or lessee and a water right holder has an obligation to use such resources in a manner as not to impair or diminish the people's rights and the people's long­ term interest in that property or resource, including down slope lands, waters and resources.

65. We reiterate that natural resources including forests, water bodies, rivers, seashores, etc. are held by the State as a trustee on behalf of the people and especially the future generations. These constitute common properties and people are entitled to uninterrupted use thereof. The State cannot transfer public trust properties to a private party, if such a transfer interferes with the right of the public and the court can invoke the public trust doctrine and take affirmative action for protecting the right of people to have access to light, air and water and also for protecting rivers, sea, tanks, trees, forests and associated natural ecosystems.”


21. The Supreme Court has considered the above two decisions in the case of Association For Environment Protection Vs State Of Kerala & Ors. and at paragraphs 9 and 10 held thus:­
“9. We have prefaced disposal of this appeal by discussing the public trust doctrine and its applicability in different situations because the Division Bench of the Kerala High Court, which dealt with the writ petition filed by the appellant for restraining the respondents from constructing a building (hotel/restaurant) on the banks of River Periyar within the area of Aluva Municipality skirted the real issue and casually dismissed the writ petition only on the ground that while the appellant had questioned the construction of a hotel, the respondents were actually constructing a restaurant as part of the project for renovation and beautification of Manalpuram Park. 10. The people of the State of Kerala, which is also known world over as the ‘God’s Own Country’ are very much conscious of the imperative of protecting environment and ecology in general and the water bodies, i.e., the rivers and the lakes in particular, which are integral part of their culture, heritage and an important source of livelihood. This appeal is illustrative of the continuing endeavour of the people of the State to ensure that their rivers are protected from all kinds of man made pollutions and/or other devastations.” The Supreme Court has in so observing allowed the Writ Petition filed by the Appellant and directed the Respondents to demolish the structure raised for establishing a restaurant as part of the renovation and beautification of Manalpuram Park at Aluva.

22. From the above decisions, it is clear that the State being a trustee on behalf of the people is enjoined to protect and preserve the natural resources which would include water bodies such as Lakes and allow the public interrupted use thereof. We find that in the present case the Respondents have failed in their duty as trustee to protect and preserve the said Lake for the benefit of the public who were entitled to uninterrupted use thereof. We find that the Respondent No. 1­ Corporation has illegally constructed on the said Lake by having it filled up. We are of the view that the Respondent No. 9 State could not have granted post facto sanction to such illegal construction carried out by the Respondent No. 1­Corporation. There has in fact been a breach of the post facto sanction granted by the State Government which was for beautification of the said Lake and not for the change of user of the subject plot. We find that the State Government has failed to take action against those concerned for the illegal construction including to have the subject plot transferred back to the State. It is thus,
necessary in the circumstances of the case to invoke the public trust doctrine and protect the right of the people to the said Lake by ordering its restoration. This Public Interest Litigation must accordingly, succeed. Hence, we pass the following order:­

(i) We order and direct the State Government and collector of Mumbai Suburban District to take over possession of the subject plot within a period of three months from today.

(ii) We order and direct the State Government and Collector of Mumbai Suburban District to demolish the illegal construction done on the subject plot and restore the Khajuria Lake, as it existed prior to being filled up, within a period of six months from taking over of the subject plot.

(iii) Rule is made partly absolute in the above terms with no order as to costs.

(iv) Place the Public Interest Litigation on 19th November 2018 for Directions. The State shall file Affidavit of Compliance before the next date.