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Corporation asked to explain conditions at relief centre

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The Hindu               28.05.2013

Corporation asked to explain conditions at relief centre

Deplorable:Petitioner says the conditionof children sent to Palluruthy relief settlementis pathetic.— FILE Photo
Deplorable:Petitioner says the conditionof children sent to Palluruthy relief settlementis pathetic.— FILE Photo

High Court summons civic body Secretary.

A Division Bench of the Kerala High Court on Monday directed the Kochi Corporation Secretary to appear before the court on June 4 to explain the condition of the Palluruthy relief settlement centre.

The bench comprising Chief Justice Manjula Chellur and Justice K. Vinod Chandran issued the directive on a petition filed by P.J. Peter seeking directives to the corporation to prevent begging, particularly child begging, in the corporation area where soliciting alms has been banned.

The court observed that in spite of the matter pending before the court, the counsel for the corporation had not appeared before the court.

The petitioner pointed out that children were seen begging on streets despite the fact that it had been banned. There was a mafia involved in running the begging network. The petitioner also said that the condition of the children sent to the relief settlement was very pathetic. There were many shortcomings in the running of the settlement centre. It lacked man power and medical facilities. The children rescued from the streets were often forced to stay with persons with various ailments such as mental disabilities. This posed a threat to the future of the children.

The petitioner said the corporation was also dumping waste such as broken tar bins, posing a health hazard to the inmates.

The petitioner sought a directive to take urgent steps to create facilities for the rescue and rehabilitation of child beggars.

 

Water Adalat

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The Hindu               28.05.2013

Water Adalat

Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) will hold a Water Adalat on Tuesday between 9.30 a.m. and 11 a.m. at the offices of the Assistant Executive Engineer (AEE), North West 2 sub-division at West of Chord Road and at AEE, South West 4 sub-division at Jayanagar 4th Block.

 

New government gets a month to submit status report on garbage

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The Hindu               28.05.2013

New government gets a month to submit status report on garbage

Getting tough:The High Court of Karnataka has sought information about the progress made in amending rules to ensure stricter fines for littering in public places.— FILE Photo: K. Murali Kumar
Getting tough:The High Court of Karnataka has sought information about the progress made in amending rules to ensure stricter fines for littering in public places.— FILE Photo: K. Murali Kumar

Giving the newly elected government some breathing room, the Karnataka High Court has allowed it till June 28 to submit a status report on compliance of all court orders on solving Bangalore’s garbage problem.

A Division Bench comprising Justice N. Kumar and Justice B.V. Nagarathna granted a month’s time as it was brought to its notice that the government had just taken over and required time to submit its responses.

The court asked the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) to publish on its website reports of the technical and expert committees inviting objections and suggestions from the public.

The Bench asked BBMP Commissioner Siddaiah, who is retiring at the end of the month, to submit a report to the court on the issues that were not covered so far in the court orders, on finding long-lasting solutions to the garbage menace.

The Bench appreciated the manner in which he assisted the court in the last six months.

Strong action

During the hearing, the Bench asked the authorities about the progress made in bringing in amended rules to raise the fines on those littering in public places and failing to adhere to waste segregation norms.

“I have seen with my own eyes that people, all educated, coming in cars or scooters and throwing plastic covers containing garbage on the street corners. They are all white-collared people. So, the earliest the law is put into force, the better. Imposing a mere Rs. 100 or Rs. 200 as fine won’t help. You may have to treat it as an offence and cut off civic amenities,” Mr. Kumar observed orally.

 


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