Let me put it straight-
the apex court verdict in the matter of demolition of 5 apartment complexes at
Maradu, Kochi is literally a legal murder of justice.
I do not know if ever in
the history of any court a verdict has been announced without hearing the most
affected parties. In this case the flat owners.
As
a layman, the following facts are deducted from the media reports:
-
The Marad
Panchayat had cleared the construction of the apartments either due to the
ambiguity in the law or due to the ever present corruption.
-
There was
definite failure of the government administration in communicating judicial
observations/orders down the line, particularly to those who are required to
act on them
-
The notorious delays
in our judiciary have also played havoc in this case. The Kerala High Court had
observed, around 2005-6, that the coastal zone mapping of Marad was wrong and,
subsequently, the apex court had viewed the same as ambiguous. But it is only
in 2019 that the apex court constituted committee to bring clarity on the
issue. This committee, headed by the District Collector (who should have been
one of the accused for his failure to detect the violations in the first place
and prevent construction) had reported that when the permission was given in
2006-6 what was applicable was the Coastal Zone Management Plan approved in
1996. But it had failed to report that in 2011 the categorization had been
reviewed but notified in 2019, shortly before submission of their report.
-
The frenzy with
which the implementation of the order has been sought to be executed is also a
matter of concern. As per the report in Times of India dated 9/5/2019, the state government, on the basis of vigilance reports about
violation of CRZ norms, had asked the Maradu municipality to revoke all
building permits. The municipality issued showcause notices to the builders,
one of whom challenged it in the Kerala high court. In 2012, a single-judge
bench quashed the municipality’s notices to the builders on the ground that the
state had no power to issue directions to local bodies to act in a certain
manner. A division bench of the HC upheld this decision in 2015. The matter has been pending in the SC since
December 2015 on an appeal filed by KSCZMA, the authority. It is apparently this
appeal that has been now taken up and the buildings ordered to be demolished within one month.
-
Worse, the apex court had passed this order without
hearing the most affected parties- the owners of the flats. This is evident from the Indian Express report, dated
6 Jul 2019, titled ‘SC judge hits out at stay on demolition in Kochi by another
bench’. As per this report a vacation bench of Justices Indira Banerjee and
Ajay Rastogi had, on 10 Jun 2019, stayed the demolition till further orders
even while maintaining that judicial
propriety demanded that the petitions be heard by the same bench which ordered
the demolition.
-
A statement by
Arun Mishra, the senior judge of the bench that ordered the demolition -I am
surprised that an apex court judge has
stayed an order without knowing that such an order existed- should make every
citizens interested in rule of the law to ask ‘what is happening in our apex
courts?’
-
There is merit in
the assertion by C M Varghese of Maradu Bhavana Samrakshana Samithi that they
were denied natural justice by the apex court because of the order being passed
without hearing their side.
-
It was only on
the court hauling up the Chief Secretary of the State that the bureaucracy
starting moving. And the way they started moving is there for all to see.
Issuing notices to vacate the flats within 5 days, cutting off electricity and
water, inviting bids to demolish the flats. Wow! Unheard of efficiency in
persecuting innocents!
-
It is amidst all
this torture that the apex court started thinking of justice for the victims.
But again its decisions cannot be said to be exactly judicious.
-
All flat owners
are now required to be paid an interim compensation of Rs 25 lakhs each by the
Government of Kerala. Since the flats have distinct floor areas and facilities
which dictate their prices the irrationality of the direction is at once
striking. Worse, the Kerala Government has not yet paid compensation to the
thousands who have lost their belongings including homes during the floods of 2018.
The roads in Kerala are in shambles. All because the government is practically
bankrupt. So where will the money come from? (Following the footsteps of the
apex court, the Kerala High Court has now ordered the State Government to pay
compensation to the flood affected within 2 weeks!)
-
This money is
directed to be recovered from the developers and public servants who have
connived in breaking rules. But when? And how? Given the snail’s pace of our
court processes and the lethargy of our public servants it is very unlikely
that this money will be recovered at all, in the predictable future.
-
The court has
also ordered freezing of accounts of the developers. With CBI and ED trying
their best we still continue to get updates of the bank accounts and properties
of P Chidambaram and his son, which seems to be spread all over the world. The
latest report on the subject is that two developers have approached the court
to cancel the freeze.
-
A single judge
commission has been constituted to go into the claims of compensation. This has
to be done within one year.
-
I would even
question the need to demolish the flats at considerable cost to the exchequer
(even if theoretically, or legally, it can be recovered from the developers).
To one who is used to thinking rationally the
following would have been the correct steps to have been followed by the
court(s).
-
First bring the
public servants, who have flouted the laws (the original sinners!) and the
developers to book. They should be punished exemplarily so that no one hence
forth dares to bend or break rules. Even if all their wealth is confiscated and
they have to spent the rest of their lives behind bars and their families have
to beg on the streets, so be it.
-
From the recoveries
so made, the compensation to be paid to the flat owners, based on (I repeat based on and not equal to) the value
shown in the registration documents. The fact is that most of the flats have
been undervalued in these documents to reduce the burden of fees.
-
Flat owners be
given reasonable time, say one year, from the date of receipt of compensation,
to vacate.
-
Thereafter the
flats should be left to self destruct with nature taking over. As per reports
available now even the locals will be ordered to shift to safer places when the
demolition process is carried out!
Lastly, it should be mentioned that there are gross
abuses of nature that are making life miserable for the population of Kerala.
Some of these are listed below.
-
The failure to
implement the Gadgil Committee Report on conservation of Western Ghats. Talking
about this report, it has to be said that only in India can a report on
ecology, prepared by an environmentalist, be allowed to be reviewed by a space
scientist and diluted so much so that it results in the subversion of the whole
effort.
-
Almost all fresh
water bodies are polluted in Kerala. A study of water samples from
Bharathapuzha, the second longest river in Kerala, has shown that e coli
contamination is almost 700 times the permissible levels.
-
The longest
river, Periyar, is totally polluted by the industries on its banks. Of interest
is the case of a factory Nita Gelatin against whom the locals have protested
many times. Unfortunately, the courts have only directed the police to provide
protection to the factory.
-
The Hindustan
Coca Cola Beverages company in Plachimada has not only exploited the
underground water resources of the area but also contaminated all the fresh
water sources as well as land by selling its heavy metal contaminated waste as
manure to the innocent locals who are mostly tribals. A case against the now closed factory is
pending in the apex court for more than a decade now. Meanwhile, a High Power
Committee, constituted in 2009, had assessed the compensation due to the locals
to be about Rs 230 cr. This has also not made any headway as far as
implementation is concerned.
-
Right from the
southern tip to the north there are plenty of protests in Kerala against sand
mining in rivers, deforestation, razing hillocks and filling of agricultural
lands. And there are many cases covering these very issues, pending with
various authorities, including the courts. If there is any action being taken
on them, they are, sadly, not visible to the citizens.
Our judiciary is a failure
on account of preposterous delays. That it is a failure from the point of view
that ‘justice should not only be done but seen to be done’ may not be known to many
except those who have been victims of unfair judgments and to critics of
judicial conduct and performance.
I only hope that the
victims of Marad flats demolition judgment would not give in to despair and
commit the worst crimes on themselves. They need to join the crusaders
demanding comprehensive and urgent judicial reforms that would make our
judiciary not only transparent and just but also accountable and effective.
Tailpiece: There is a
controversy on a carshed for metro rail to be constructed at Aarey Colony which
is contiguous to the Sanjay Gandhi National Park in Mumbai. The CM of
Maharashtra is on record saying that all due diligence have been given to the
issue before deciding on the site. Petitions by environmentalists and locals against
felling of trees had been dismissed by the high court as well as the apex
court. Now an LLB student has reportedly written to the CJI on the issue and
the CJI has accepted it as a suo moto PIL.
Further reading:
‘SC orders 5 Kochi bldgs with 500 flats razed for
CRZ breach’ at https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/apa/timesofindia/Print.Article.aspx?mode=text&href=TOIM%2F2019%2F05%2F09&id=Ar00107
‘SC judge hits out at stay on demolition in
Kochi by another bench’ and dated 6 Jul 2019 available at https://indianexpress.com/article/india/sc-judge-hits-out-at-stay-on-demolition-in-kochi-by-another-bench-5817838/
Deccan
Chronicle report titled ‘Flat owners say justice denied’ date lined 29 Jul 2019
at Kochi
Former
Chairperson of Marad Municipality Sunila Sibi, on Sep 11, 2019, at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A7sSb7zQQLo (This
is in Malayalam)
‘Under
SC sledgehammer, Maradu flat owners have no option but to move out’, IE, 06 Oct
2019 at https://indianexpress.com/article/india/kochi-apartments-demolition-maradu-residents-kerala-sc-order-6055477/
‘50 flats in Marad whose
ownership details are not available’, Janmabhumi (Malayalam), 05/10/2019
09 Oct 2019
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