Azim Premji says no to K'taka CM's plea for vehicular movement via Wipro
He also said that allowing public vehicular movement through Wipro’s Sarjapur campus will cause 'significant legal, governance, and statutory challenges'.
PTI
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The Outer Ring Road has been a nightmare for commuters due to severe traffic congestion. (Wikimedia, X)
Bengaluru, 25 Sept
Wipro founder-chairman Azim Premji has declined Karnataka
Chief Minister Siddaramaiah’s request to allow limited vehicular movement
through the company’s campus in Bengaluru, saying that it is an exclusive
private property owned by a listed company, not meant for public thoroughfare.
He also said that allowing public vehicular movement through
Wipro’s Sarjapur campus will cause "significant legal, governance, and
statutory challenges".
Siddaramaiah had, on 19 September written to Premji to
explore "the possibility of allowing limited vehicular movement throughthe Wipro campus, subject to mutually agreed terms and necessary security
considerations".
Preliminary assessments by traffic and urban mobility
experts indicate that such a measure could reduce congestion on adjoining
stretches of the ORR by nearly 30 per cent, particularly during peak office
hours, Siddaramaiah wrote.
"Your support in this matter will go a long way in
easing traffic bottlenecks, enhancing commuter experience, and contributing to
a more efficient and liveable Bengaluru. I would greatly appreciate it if your
team could engage with our officials to work out a mutually acceptable plan at
the earliest," the Chief Minister said.
In his reply sent on Wednesday, Premji said that he
appreciated Siddaramaiah’s leadership for initiatives concerning the critical
issue of traffic congestion in Bengaluru. He, however, maintained that there
would be several challenges in allowing vehicular movement through their
campus.
"With respect to the specific suggestion of allowing
public vehicular movement through our Sarjapur campus, we apprehend significant
legal, governance, and statutory challenges, since it is an exclusive private
property owned by a listed company not intended for public thoroughfare,"
Premji said.
"That apart, it will also be appreciated that our
Sarjapur campus is a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) providing services to global
customers, our contractual conditions mandate stringent, non-negotiable access
control norms for governance and compliance," he added.
According to the Wipro chairman, public vehicular movement
through private property would not be effective as a sustainable, long-term
solution.
"Wipro nevertheless stands committed to partner with Karnataka
government to find a lasting solution for Bengaluru's mobility
challenges," he said, adding that he believed a collaborative, data-driven
approach would yield the most impactful results for the city.
He also noted that there was a need for urgent and effective
measures for the traffic situation, particularly along the Outer Ring Road, for
being an export-oriented economic hub.
"The problem's complexity, stemming from multiple
factors, suggests that there is unlikely to be a single point solution or a
silver bullet to resolve it," he noted.
Azim Premji said he believed the most effective path forward
is to commission a comprehensive, scientific study led by an entity with
world-class expertise in urban transport management. He also noted that such an
exercise would help to develop a holistic roadmap of effective solutions that
are implementable in the short, medium, and long term.
"To demonstrate our commitment to being a part of the
solution, Wipro will be pleased to engage in this process and underwrite a
significant portion of the cost for this expert study," Premji noted.
The Outer Ring Road has been a nightmare for commuters due
to severe traffic congestion and bad road conditions.
The issue came to the limelight when the BlackBuck CEO and
co-founder Rajesh Yabaji said on 'X' that his company would move out of the ORR
(Bellandur) as the average commute for his colleagues went up by one-and-a-half
hours one way and the roads are full of potholes and dust, "coupled with
lowest intent to get them rectified". He further said, "Didn’t see
any of this changing in the next 5 years."
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