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Supreme Court takes suo moto notice of housing schemes
By Adnan Rafique
ISLAMABAD—Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry Tuesday took suo-moto
notice of the ongoing construction of Islamabad Chalets Housing Scheme
because of environmental concerns.
He ordered registration of a petition about the issue under Article 184
(3) of the Constitution and ordered all concerned parties to appear
before the court on October 13.
The order was issued on the basis of a report prepared by Justice Javed
Iqbal about the environmental implications of the project in the light
of articles published in the press.
The parties were asked to appear and explain as to why, pending a
decision on the petition, an interim order may not be passed restraining
any further construction activity on the site or any related work in the
area.
Notices have been issued to the Chief Secretary, NWFP, the Chairman of
Capital Development Authority, Director General of Pakistan
Environmental Protection Agency, and the owners and contractors of the
project as well as to the Advocate General NWFP and the Federal Attorney
General.
Justice Iqbal’s report says that the Margalla Hills National Park is an
important ecological preserve and an integral part of Islamabad and
lends the Capital the unique characteristic of its beautiful
environment.
The housing scheme known as `Islamabad Chalets’ is only a few kilometers
from the boundary of this Park, in the Haripur District.
Islamabad Chalets on Margalla Hills is the first housing scheme and
likely to open the way for more such schemes, seriously threatening the
environment of the area due to increase in traffic on the already
congested narrow road and adding to the noise pollution and waste
generation.
The site of the scheme falls in the catchments area of Khanpur Dam,
which is one of the main sources of the supply of water to Rawalpindi
and Islamabad.
The development will cause damage to the water reservoir through heavy
flow of silt, sewer and other pollutants, the report says.
This will not only cause a speedy silting of Khanpur Dam but also
deteriorate the water quality, which would result in health hazards to
the citizens of Rawalpindi and Islamabad.
It is also clear that there will be no access to this housing scheme
from Islamabad except a road, which goes through the Margalla Hills
National Park,thereby directly impacting the environment of this
protected area.
Moreover, the Government of NWFP confirmed to the Pakistan Environmental
Protection Agency that neither any permission nor NOC was granted for
the Chalets and that the project would have serious trans-province
impacts.
Based on that the EPA issued notices to the owners of related
constructing parties that appeared in the press also. Subsequently the
EPA approved the Initial Environmental Examination (IDD) of the project
and issued an NOC, the basis of which “is unlawful because the
conditions imposed is eyewash and unrealistic that can never be complied
with,” the report says.
This NOC has been issued without having carried out an Environmental
Impact Assessment having under section 2(xi) read with section 12 of the
Pakistan Environmental Protection, Act, 1997 (PEPA), the report adds.
Even otherwise and even in the absence of any statutory safeguards, the
construction of a housing scheme in the area could not have been
permitted as it is in derogation of the Fundamental Rights guaranteed to
the citizens by the Constitution.
The report underlines that the destruction caused by the recent
earthquake is a reminder, if one was needed, that development and
construction in disregard of environmental concerns could wreak havoc
and cause immense loss of life and property. |