SC orders status quo on Sonapur demolition
This development comes after over 40 residents of the Sonapur area of Assam filed a contempt petition alleging wilful violation of the top court's interim order dated September 17 pausing the demolition practice across the country without prior permission
ANI
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"Issue notice. In the meantime, parties to maintain the status quo," the top court said.PHOTO:PTI
New Delhi , 30 Sept
The Supreme
Court on Monday directed to maintain status quo on Assam's Sonapur demolition
drive and issued notice to authorities concerned.
This
development comes after over 40 residents of the Sonapur area of Assam filed a
contempt petition alleging wilful violation of the top court's interim order
dated September 17 pausing the demolition practice across the country without
prior permission.
Senior
Advocate Huzefa Ahmadi appeared for the petitioners in the matter. A bench of
justices BR Gavai and KV Viswanathan issued notice to the Assam Government and
others on the petition seeking contempt proceedings against the local
authorities for violating the top court's earlier order.
"Issue
notice. In the meantime, parties to maintain the status quo," the top
court said.
Over 40
residents of Assam's Sonapur area moved the top court, alleging wilful
violation of the court's interim order dated September 17, 2024, directing that
no demolition should take place across the country without prior permission as
the local authorities have begun an eviction drive in the state's Kachutoli
village.
In the plea
filed through advocate Adeel Ahmed, the petitioners sought to initiate contempt
proceedings against the alleged contemnors for committing gross deliberate and
wilful contempt of the top court for deliberate and wilful violation of the top
court's earlier order.
On
September 17, the top court, in an interim measure, ordered that till the next
date of hearing, it is directed that there shall be no demolition anywhere
across the country without seeking permission of this Court. The top court also
clarified that the order would not be applicable if there is an unauthorised
structure in any public place, such as a road, street, footpath, abutting
railway line, or any river body or water bodies, and also to cases where there
is an order for demolition made by a court of law.
The
petitioner said that concerned authorities have not followed the order passed
by the court for the event of eviction and have flagged or put up red coloured
stickers on the walls of the petitioners without sending any kind of notice or
letter stating the issue of eviction or demolition.
The
petitioners, including Faruk Ahmed, along with others, said that they have been
residing in the said villages of Kachutoli Pathar, Kachutoli, and Kachutoli
revenue village under Sonapur mouza in the district of Kamrup Metro for many
years.
Further,
the petitioners stated that they have been residing in the said lands by virtue
of a deed of power of attorney that has been executed in their name by the
original pattadars of the said lands.
The
petitioners said that they are not the owners of the said lands, and they do
not have any ownership rights but are enjoying occupation and residing over the
said lands by virtue of the power of attorney document, which is a legally
valid process, the petitioner said. They cited Gauhati High Court's order dated
September 20, 2024, whereby Advocate General gives an undertaking to that
effect that no action would be taken against the petitioners till the
representations are disposed of in the manner directed by the Supreme Court in
the order dated February 3, 2020.
"However,
here in the present case, the respondent-authorities have not followed the
order passed by the court for event of eviction and have flagged or put up red
sticker on the walls of the petitioners without sending any kind of notice or
letter stating issue of eviction or demolition," the petitioner said.
The
petitioners claimed that they have been residing in the said scheduled lands
for around last seven, eight decades since generations, but they have never
engaged
in any
disputes or clash with the Tribal or protected people living in the adjoining
areas. They have been living peacefully and through proper relationship with
people belonging to all the communities, whether it be social or trade
relationship. There have never been any protests or revolts, the petitioners
stated.
However,
the government authority, without any prior notice to the petitioner, has
started the process of eviction and has put up marks in the walls of the
dwelling house of the petitioner, which would be evicted/demolished without any
notice, the petition mentioned.
The
petitioners submitted that contrary to the allegations and assertions of the
District Administration authorities that the petitioners are illegal occupiers
and encroachers of the lands of the tribals or the protected class, they have
been residing in the lands wherein they have been allowed to live by the actual
pattadars, and in many of the cases the actual pattadars have been from people
belonging to the protected class who allowed the petitioners to stay in their
lands by building houses after execution of power of attorney.
However,
the said lands were not sold to the petitioners, and neither the petitioners
ever asserted any ownership or possession right over the said lands.
"They
have been the residents of the said scheduled lands since around 1950s through
government-granted patta way before the Tribal Belt was formed. Neither the
petitioners nor the tribal people have gotten their lands by way of transfer.
Apart from that, the petitioners beg to mention an important aspect that there
has not been proper demarcation of the tribal belt areas," the petition
said.
The
petitioners said they and their forefathers were the registered pattadars of
their scheduled lands way before the 1950s, when the aforesaid scheduled land
was first included under the tribal belt.-ANI
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