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Chennai mayor inaugurates free diabetes camps

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The Times of India             12.02.2014

Chennai mayor inaugurates free diabetes camps

CHENNAI: Chennai mayor Saidai Duraisamy inaugurated free diabetes camps in the city on Tuesday.

The Chennai Corporation along with Dr Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre is conducting the free camps across the city as part of chief minister Jayalalithaa's 66th birthday celebrations.

The mayor inaugurated the programme at Pulianthope Kesava Pillai Park.

The corporation is planning to screen 66,000 people for diabetes. "We will conduct free medical camps in 1,260 slums, 40 parks across the 15 zones. We will also provide free medicines to those who have tested positive for diabetes," corporation officials said.

Dr V Mohan, chairman of Dr Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre, said a recent ICMR-INDIAB study shows that 14% of urban people and 8% of rural people have diabetes. "But unfortunately many people are unaware that they have diabetes. There is also a need for a mass screening to detect such patients," he said.

The civic body has screened 2,76,757 people for diabetes and 3,42,354 people for blood pressure and identified 60,124 new cases of diabetics and 50,614 new cases of blood pressure since 2005.

 

CMDA Seals Hospital Building in Korattur

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The New Indian Express            12.02.2014

CMDA Seals Hospital Building in Korattur

Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA) on Tuesday locked and sealed the fourth and fifth floors of a multi-storeyed hospital building in Thirumalai Nagar Avenue in Korattur. The action by CMDA comes in the wake of  Madras High Court rejecting the petition of the promoters of the hospital challenging CMDA order to restore the land to its original position.

The court has observed that the hospital promoters without obtaining planning permission constructed a hospital building.

CMDA said that the owner of the building constructed unauthorized ground floor plus five floors of the multi-storeyed hospital building.

“The fourth and fifth floors of the hospital building had been locked and sealed,” a CMDA release stated.

CMDA stated that despite locking and sealing notice issued on November 12, 2013, the owner did not rectify the building and instead continued to proceed with the construction.

 

Illegal buildings in Tamil Nadu face the axe

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The Times of India            11.02.2014

Illegal buildings in Tamil Nadu face the axe

CHENNAI: Thousands of unauthorised buildings in the state are facing demolition after the Madras high court on Monday quashed two government orders that proposed to legalise illegal structures built till July 1, 2007.

The first bench comprising Chief Justice R K Agrawal and Justice M Sathyanaryanan said: "But for the lackadaisical attitude on the part of the authorities, such an alarming and mushrooming growth of unauthorized and illegal constructions would not have come into place." The bench was delivering verdict on two PILs against October 30, 2012 government orders extending amnesty schemes for illegal buildings constructed between 1999 and July 1, 2007.

"The state government and statutory authorities concerned are required to act diligently and prevent recurrence of such unlawful activities in future. They must deal with the violators with an iron hand. This court also hopes and trusts that no further extension of cut-off date will be granted in future by the state government," the bench said in its 67-page judgment.

In 2000, the Supreme Court upheld the validity of Section 113 of the Town and Country Planning Act, and permitted the government to use the clause and regularise illegal buildings built till February 28, 1999 "as one-time measure". However, successive governments used the same route to extend the cutoff date for structures built till 2000 and then till 2001.

In 2006 and 2007, the then government brought in two ordinances which later became Acts. All were struck down by the high court, prompting the government and other stakeholders to move the SC. After the appeals were sent back to the high court, the state government constituted Justice S Mohan committee, which recommended extension of the amnesty schemes for buildings constructed up to July 1, 2007. The government issued two orders on October 30, 2012 accepting the recommendations.

Quashing both the orders and pointing out that for the past 13 years the government had not done anything pragmatic to address the issue, the bench said: "Thirteen years had lapsed and the state government and authorities concerned have failed to take any effective and sincere steps to avoid such a kind of nuisance. They merely extended the cutoff date for regularization of unauthorized constructions, saying illegal constructions have come up in such a large scale that it is virtually impossible for them to resort to demolition and, instead, by collecting hefty regularization fee and fulfilment of other conditions, they will regularize unauthorized constructions."

The bench reiterated the fact that the state government did have power to grant exemptions under Section 113 of the Town and Country Planning Act, and said the regularisation issue could be referred to the Justice Mohan Committee or a different committee. It said based on the recommendations given, the government can frame appropriate guidelines and rules for proper and effective implementation of Section 113-C of the Act. 

 


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