Tuesday, May 6, 2008

delhi sealing

The 2006 Delhi Sealing Drive is a campaign by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) to close (and thus 'seal' the locks of) a number of illegal commercial establishments in Delhi, India which are running in residential areas without authorization. The drive has witnessed considerable opposition from trading bodies in the city which led to the death of four people in September 2006.

Currently the Supreme Court of India has suspended the drive. The new plan envisions a mixed land use policy by which commercial and residential use can be simultaneous. However, the sealing drive in Delhi is very much in progress. Shops and establishments which were registered by Municipal Corporation of Delhi under 24 specified categories were made to pay various charges though most of them have commercial electricity meters and some have approved commercial water meters. Almost all the shops had VAT registration and the owners were paying income tax through income from these shops. So all the shops which are running from residential areas and were not found on notified roads are being forcibely shut down.


Criticism of the government
The government has been reprimanded time and again by the courts for failing to conduct the drive properly: for making excuses such as the drive will create law and order problems, and for not proceeding against the big establishments but instead targeting small shops. Apparently the government has a way of solving the issue by putting in force the Delhi Master Plan 2021 which will allow mixed land use and thus make the commercial activity in residential area legal(a law which the court has declared invalid) out of judicial purview,[2] but the government has as yet not given any indication that it plans to do so. This is probably because that would put the government in direct confrontation with the judiciary. One of the allegations put forward is that the government is not taking any initiative to stop the drive in order to promote shopping malls.


[edit] The Court's Judgement
Reacting to several PILs, the Supreme Court has repeatedly reprimanded the government for improperly conducting the drive. After the government introduced a law to provide relief to the trading bodies, the court declared it invalid in response to another public interest litigation.[3] The court has also struck down various petitions of the government suspending the drive.


[edit] Traders' Arguments
According to several Traders' Unions affected by the sealing drive[citation needed]:

The result of the action is going to have a serious economic, social and psychological impact.
Thousands will be rendered unemployed.
The Government has fallen short of providing the space required for shops and offices and, if pursued, the sealing drive risks in creating a demand supply imbalance.

[edit] Timeline of the Drive
To meet Wikipedia's quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup because it is in a list format that may be better presented using prose.
You can help by converting this section to prose, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (September 2007)

As a result of the court's directions, the drive was started in February 2006. It has undergone several hiccups and is currently in the process of being restarted. The timeline is given below.[1][2]

February 16
The Delhi High Court hands over a notice to the MCD to remove all the commercial ventures in residential areas in the city.

February 25
After some violent reactions the demolition activities are suspended.

March 18
After the SC had earlier fixed March 26, 2006 as the deadline for sealing of illegal shops, traders protest against the demolition activities in the residential areas in the city.

March 21
Traders call for a bandh.

March 24
The SC extend the deadline to March 28, 2006 after seeing the tense situation in the capital. It orders violating traders to submit affidavits stating that they will shut down their businesses or face action from March 29.[4]. Over 40000 traders file the affidavits.[5]

March 29
MCD starts sealing the commercial establishments in residential areas whose owners had failed to file a requistee before the deadline set by the court under tight security.

April 25
The union urban development minister Jaipal Reddy says that the central government would provide a bill concerning regularisation of commercial establishments.

May 20
MCD announces the end of the sealing drive after the central government introduces a bill to suspend the action of municipal authorities.

May 21
President Kalam gives his assent to the bill to make it a law.

May 23
MCD starts desealing shops in the capital.

May 23
In response to a petition moved jointly by the Delhi Residents Welfare Associations Front and an NGO Citizens Forum, which alleged that the new legislation was politically motivated keeping in view the coming municipal elections, and was illegal, the SC issues notices to the centre and the MCD.

August 10
The SC terms as invalid, the new law which was putting a moratorium on demolitions and sealings in the capital. The court also orders the MCD to restart sealing in the capital.

September 1
The MCD resumes the sealing of shops in residential areas after a gap of three months. The All Delhi Traders Association files a petition in the SC demanding the implementation of the Delhi Special Provisions Act that suspended the demolitions for a year. The monitoring committee appointed by the SC in consultation with the MCD decides that no day-to-day-need shops will be sealed.

September 7
In another effort to avoiding a confrontation with either the judiciary or the protesting trading bodies, the delhi government's Delhi Development Authority (DDA) makes several amendments to the 2001 Delhi Master Plan. According to the proposed amendments:

Professionals can use their basements as offices, except in 70 upmarket localities.
MCD or government-recognised pre-primary schools will not be sealed.
Commercial activity will be permitted in Delhi's 350 villages, except polluting or hazardous units.
The amendments however offer no relief to Delhi's upmarket areas.

September 19
As MCD expands its sealing drive in the capital, traders in the capital increase their protests. Across nearly 100 different locations they condemn what they call the government's ambivalent attitude towards sealing. The SC refuses to stay the sealing drive and criticizes the union government and the MCD for creating confusion about sealing.

September 20
Four people die in police firing after the bandh called by the traders in Delhi turns violent.

September 21
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh sets up a Group of Ministers (GoM) to look into the issues pertaining to sealing in Delhi. The MCD suspends all sealing operations in the capital for the time being, following the violence. It says that it wants more security to carry out the sealing drive.

September 29
The SC declares that there will be no sealing of shops or commercial establishments till October 31 after which it shall resume. The court also asks the owners of the illegal shops to submit affidavits stating that their businesses were being run on illegal premises. The court also clarifies that it will not tolerate the government's continued attempts to pass new laws that dilute its orders to remove shops in residential areas.

October 18
The Supreme Court extends till January 31, 2007 the last date for filing of affidavits by traders in the capital who are using residential premises for commercial activities for those who had not done so till yet and thus in a way temporarily postpones the sealing of their shops. Sealing is however not stopped for the 44000 traders who have already submitted the affidavits.

October 25
The Delhi Traders Association decides to intensify its protests against the sealing drive, which was scheduled to restart from November 1.

October 30
The traders start the three day strike against sealing drive.

October 31
Wikinews has related news:
Three day traders' strike in New DelhiThe traders try to resolve the case and meet Jaipal Reddy and Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit.

November 1
Wikinews has related news:
Police disperse striking traders in New DelhiThe centre moves the SC seeking relief for the 44000 traders in Delhi, who are now facing sealing. The centre tells the Supreme Court's monitoring committee that sealings cannot go on because the law and order situation cannot be handled. They claim that the protests are threatening to become extremely violent, and could seriously affect the whole city.

November 2
Wikinews has related news:
Sealing in New Delhi put off until MondayThe SC decides to hear the sealing case on November 6. The GoM decides not to carry out any sealing operations until November 6.

November 3
The MCD approaches the SC with a fresh petition asking for an indefinite postponement of sealing citing the law and order situation. The Delhi Police adds that it needs reinforcements to deal with the law and order situation, which it will only have by November 6.

November 6
Wikinews has related news:
Supreme Court orders resumption of sealing drive in New DelhiThe SC refuses to grant any relief to traders from the sealing drive. The court dismisses applications of the Centre, Delhi government and the MCD, seeking relief for the traders. A meeting of the GoM decides that the SC's order on sealing would be implemented. After this statement, traders announce that they will hold a 24-hour bandh in Delhi on November 7 and then decide their future course of action.

November 7
Wikinews has related news:
Traders' one day strike in Indian capitalTraders protesting against the Supreme Court's order to resume the sealing drive hold a one day strike.

November 8
MCD restarts the drive amidst protests. 25 companies of paramilitary forces are deployed in New Delhi to assist in sealing drive.

November 9
Telecom Regulatory Authority of India's office is sealed as it was operating from a posh residential colony.

November 27
The government says that a master plan for Delhi addressing all of its civic problems will be finalised by January in 2007.[6]

December 4
Traders hold a 'Sealing Chetna Week' (Sealing Awareness Week) against the sealing drive.[7]

December 18
Showrooms of several top designers are sealed in the Ambawata complex mall near Qutub Minar in South Delhi.[8]

January 24
The government files a petition in the Supreme Court seeking to finish the drive as according to it the decisions passed by the court would become irrelevant once the Delhi Master Plan comes into force in February 2007. (The plan allows mixed land use in various circumstances according to which land can be used both for commercial and residential purposes.)[9]

January 31
Thousands of traders file affidavits (saying that they will abide by the courts verdict) as demanded by the SC even as the government claims that the soon to be notified Delhi Master Plan will finish off the drive. The new Master Plan allows far more liberal guidelines for construction and commercial development. Shops on streets across Delhi, that were forced to shut down, will have the right to reopen if they can provide parking. Under the new Masterplan, an extra floor can be added and the landlord can rent out each floor if he provides parking of two cars. Fifty per cent of the house can be used for an office and so can the basement. [10]

February 7
Confusion prevails on the issue as the government says that due to the provisions in the Master Plan there is no need for sealing. The SC appointed monitoring committee had demanded that sealing should continue. [11]

February 8
The Delhi Master Plan is notified which identifies a mixed land use policy according to which shops on over 2000 roads can function. The SC says that sealing should be suspended till February 12.[12]

February 9
An NGO, The Delhi Pradesh Citizen Council challenges the Masterplan in the Supreme Court saying that it is a move only to appease the traders ahead of incoming municipal elections.[13]

February 13
The Supreme Court stays the sealing of commercial establishments in residential areas on 2,183 roads covered by the Master Plan Delhi-2021 until further orders are issued. [14]