LCI Learning

Share on Facebook

Share on Twitter

Share on LinkedIn

Share on Email

Share More

manish (secetery)     20 February 2015

Supreme court bans shrines, statues on public roads

can I get copy of order by supreme court for following case I think in jan 2013 court done order

 

 

Along with religious structures, the court also ruled on installation of statues. "Henceforth, states shall not grant permission to install any statue or erect any structure on public roads, pavements and sideways and other public utility places," ordered a bench of Justices R M Lodha and S J Mukhopadhaya.

The order was passed on an application challenging the Kerala government's permission to a private society to install the statue of public figure on a traffic island on a national highway at a busy intersection where vehicles had to crawl because of existing encroachments.

The bench said the time has come to ban construction of temples, mosques, churches and gurudwaras on public places abutting roads which significantly restrict movement of vehicles leading to long traffic snarls. After issuing the ban, the court clarified that it would not apply to installation of street lights, mask lights or other public utility services.

On existing unauthorized religious structures on roads, the bench took a nuanced position recognizing that removal of such construction is not an easy task for either municipal authorities or police. It said these could be removed without creating a law and order problem.

"Public road is not anyone's property. Each citizen had a right to use the road and that right cannot be interfered with or impeded by constructing a temple, mosque, church or gurudwara or by installing the statue of a public figure," said Justices Lodha and Mukhopadhaya.

The order came on the application by K R Pradeep Kumar of Thiruvananthapuram district during the hearing on the issue of removal of religious structures encroaching into areas earmarked for roads. The court had, in an interim order on September 29, 2009, directed that henceforth no unauthorized construction shall be carried out or permitted in the name of temple, church, mosque or gurudwara on public streets, public parks or other public places. The direction is now a final ruling.

In respect of unauthorized constructions of religious nature that have already taken place, state governments were asked to review these on a case to case basis and take appropriate steps as expeditiously as possible. The court on Friday asked the amicus curiae to collate the policy of each state on this issue for scrutiny after four weeks.

Kerala had informed the court that out of 901 cases of encroachment, only three had been removed. The applicant, Pradeep Kumar, said though Kerala had the highest average road length in the country, the growth of traffic had rendered most roads congested.

He said installation of statues on roundabouts had further narrowed road space leading to frequent accidents. The Sundaran Nadar Foundation was permitted to install a statue in the middle of the national highway from Thiruvananthapuram to Kanyakumari at Neyyatinkara on a traffic island.

A statue of Shri Ayyankali was installed at the Vellayambalam Square in the 1980s, the applicant said. In addition, there were cases of encroachment of roads by commercial establishments in various towns, he said.

No steps have been taken by the state government to remove illegal encroachments on the roads and to prevent new structures constructed in the middle/side of important arterial roads adding to the existing problem of traffic congestion, Kumar had complained.

He had said on one hand, the state was filing affidavits on removal of encroachment on roads and on the other, it was permitting installation of statues in the middle of roads resulting in further congestion and accidents.
NEW DELHI: In an order that will be welcomed by civic bodies and bring relief to citizens, the Supreme Court on Friday banned fresh encroachment of roads, pavements and sideways by construction of religious structures or installation of statues of public figures.

The apex court's ruling addresses a common hazard in all Indian cities and towns where unauthorized religious structures - often thinly disguised cases of land grab - have sprung up on public and private land and are obstructing roads and inconveniencing residents.

The order can empower municipal and government bodies to prevent unauthorized constructions being carried out under the garb of religious structures as often local political interests and religious sentiments render authorities helpless.
 



Learning

 2 Replies

T. Kalaiselvan, Advocate (Advocate)     21 February 2015

You may contact the business promo lawyer who is interested in furnishing the details sought.

manish (secetery)     22 February 2015

I found it on supreme court website case no.8519 of 2006 case is still pending


Leave a reply

Your are not logged in . Please login to post replies

Click here to Login / Register