Forest dept must take steps to protect Ridge: Delhi HC

Update: 2023-12-15 18:27 GMT

New Delhi: The Delhi High Court on Friday said the forest department must take all steps to protect the Ridge as it pulled up the authorities here for failing to notify its land as “reserved forest” in spite of earlier directions.

Emphasising that the forest department is its custodian, Justice Jasmeet Singh expressed concern over only 96 hectares of the more than 7,000 hectares of the Ridge land being notified as “reserved forest”.

The judge said an affidavit filed by the Delhi government is “totally unsatisfactory” as it is silent on the time-frame within which the entire Ridge area would be notified and made encroachment-free.

“The court gets an impression that the respondent is not keen on protecting the Ridge land. This court is pained to note that the Ridge is part of the Aravalli range and every step must be taken

within the jurisdiction and power of the department of forest to protect the Ridge land,” the court said.

“Orders passed by the Supreme Court and the NGT (National Green Tribunal) are requiring the respondents to perform its statutory duties and protect the Ridge land, but the same is not happening,” it added.

Considered the lungs of the national capital, the Ridge is an extension of the Aravalli hill range in Delhi and is a rocky, hilly and forested area. It has been divided into four zones — south, south-central, central and north — due to administrative reasons. The four zones make up a total area of around 7,784 hectares.

Advocates Gautam Narayan and Aditya N Prasad, the amici curiae (friends of court) appointed by the high court in the matter concerning the preservation of the Ridge, said in spite of judicial orders, the authorities have just been “dragging their feet” for more than two years when it was imperative to notify the Ridge land as “reserved forest” to protect it from non-forest activities.

The judge asked the Delhi government counsel if there is “any problem” in notifying the Ridge land as forest.

He also expressed his displeasure over the “wording” used in the government’s response to the issue and said he would have to initiate contempt proceedings against the official concerned in

the face of non-compliance of court orders.

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