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The uncontrolled, Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 | Delhi News



The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (‘Delhi Rent Control Act’) applies to Delhi and New Delhi for the areas as mentioned in the said Act itself. The Delhi Rent Control Act was enacted in the year 1958 and came into force on 09.02.1958.
Why was the Delhi Rent Control Act made in the first place?
In 1939, World War -II broke out. This caused a shortage of housing.With an aim to protect the tenant’s rights, keeping in view the scarcity of residential space caused by World War -II, the New Delhi House Rent Control Order of 1939 was issued under Rule 81 of the Defence of India Rules. This was applicable only to tenancies for residential premises. The aim was to prevent arbitrary and unreasonable increase in rent and eviction of tenants by landlords, which the landlords might be tempted to do, to exploit the scarcity of residential space existing at that time. Subsequently, Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1941 was applied except to the areas where New Delhi House Rent Control Order of 1939 was in force. Then, the Delhi Rent Control Ordinance no. 25 of 1944 was issued. In 1947, Delhi and Ajmer-Merwara Rent Control Act, 1947 was enacted, and this was to be in force only for two years but it was extended for six years. It was by this Act in 1947 that, for the first time, restriction on eviction of tenants from commercial premises was included and since then the same has continued.
In 1947, when Delhi and Ajmer-Merwara Rent Control Act, 1947 was enacted, the situation in the Country was un-precedented. The country was being partitioned. The events of that time are unimaginable today. Due to partition of the country there was a large influx of refugees who migrated to Delhi, being the capital. To provide respite to them, and to provide a sense of security in respect of premises taken by them on rent for their residence as well as for their business that the 1947 Act was made. The extra-ordinary and compellingcircumstances, led to the enactment of the Rent Control Laws for Delhi. The aim of the Laws was to restrict the rights of landlords from seeking eviction of tenants and increasing rents, arbitrarily and without any reason. While, eviction could be sought from residential premises for bonafide needs, there was no such provision for seeking eviction from commercial premises, the reason being that livelihood had to be protected at all costs to ensure and encourage rehabilitation of refugees who had settled in Delhi after partition. The Delhi and Ajmer-Merwara Rent Control Act, 1947 was replaced by the Delhi and Ajmer Rent Control Act, 1952, which was repealed by the Delhi Rent Control Act in the year 1959 as noted by the Hon’ble High Court of Delhi in H.C. Sharma v/s. Life Insurance Corporation of India & Anr. 1, as the reason for rejecting the challenge to the Constitutional vires of the Delhi Rent Control Act provisions discriminating between residential and commercial premises.
Between the period 1960 to 1988, there were some amendments to the Delhi Rent Control Act. From then, nothing much has changed in the Delhi Rent Control Act except by judicial initiative undertaken by Courts, considering the changes brought by passage of time.
What happens on the Delhi Rent Control Act being applicable?
An owner/ landlord of a premises can give it on rent to a tenant under an agreement on mutually agreed terms. The mutuality ends here. It is only till here, that there is parity and equality. Once, the premises is let out on rent, the landlord loses control. When the tenancy to which the Delhi Rent Control Act applies is terminated by the landlord, a special right in favour of the tenant becomes operative. On termination, the tenant gets protection under the Delhi Rent Control Act and becomes a statutory tenant as provided under Section 2(l) of the Delhi Rent Control Act. There is a bar, an embargo, on eviction of the tenant from the premises unless the stringent conditions for eviction, most of them contained in Section 14 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, are first satisfied by the landlord who wants to evict a tenant.
The Delhi Rent Control Act is applicable to all premises in Delhi, except those which are specifically excluded under Section 3 thereof. The threshold of monthly rent exceeding Rs.3,500/- for the Delhi Rent Control Act to stop applying, though seems attractive, is saddled with the limitation that the rent cannot increase by more than 10% on the last paid rent, and only once in a period of three years.
One interesting aspect is the difference or, if correctly stated, discrimination between residential and non-residential use of premises, on matters concerning eviction. In the Delhi Rent Control Act, the definition of “premises” under Section 2(i) includes both residential and commercial premises. Section 3 (c), which is a section of exclusion also does not create any distinction between residential or non-residential use of a premises, and provides that if the rent exceeds a sum of Rs.3,500/- per month the provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act will not apply. Section 14 also begins as follows “Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other law or contract, no order or decree for the recovery of possession of any premises shall be made by any court or Controller in favour of the landlord against a tenant: Provided that the Controller may, on an application made to him in the prescribed manner, make an order for the recovery of possession of the premises on one or more of the following grounds only, namely…”. It would appear from its reading that while it applies to “premises” as defined in Section 2(i) i.e. both residential and commercial, it actually does not. In Sections 14(1) (a) to (l), some grounds of eviction such as those contained in Sub-section (d), (e), (h), (hh) and (i) qualify the same as applying in respect of residential premises alone and not for commercial premises, while the others i.e. those contained in Sub-sections (a), (b), (c), (f), (g), (j), (k) and (l) appear as applying to both residential and commercial premises. There is thus, a discrimination and a class within a class.
The interpretation of the limited grounds available for eviction of tenants under Sections 14 to 14D of the Delhi Rent Control Act including the constitutional validity of the same have been subject matter of several litigations which have often landed up at the doors of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India and the Hon’ble High Court of Delhi.
In the Delhi Rent Control Act, the definition of a tenant in respect of a “premises” is provided in Section 2(l). The Explanations contained in the said section, restrict the tenancy rights in favour of legal heirs of a deceased tenant. The restrictions were interpreted by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in the case of Gian Devi Anand v/s. Union of India 2 to be applicable only to a tenant of a residential premises, and not for a tenant of a commercial premises.
The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India, in its Judgment in the case of Gian Devi Anand considered the issue whether the legal heirs of a deceased tenant in respect of commercial premises are entitled to the same protection against eviction, as the deceased tenant or not. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, held that (a) the limitations contained in Section 2(l) (iii) of the Delhi Rent Control Act applied only for residential premises and not to commercial premises, and (b) the Delhi Rent Control Act had treated commercial properties differently from residential properties, by referring to Sections 14(1) (d) and (e) of the Delhi Rent Control Act. The Hon’ble Supreme Court proceeded by presuming that the deceased tenant and the legal heirs of such deceased tenant either are, or that they will carry on the same business, or are compelled to carry on the same business for their survival and livelihood. The said Judgment was rendered in the context that the same business is and will be the source of income for the legal heirs of the deceased tenant as well, as if they were and continue to be dependent on the same for their survival during the life time of the deceased tenant, as also after his death. The business in contemplation was probably a “family business” which was the livelihood of the entire family and on which the entire family was dependent for survival. Therefore, it was held that commercial tenancy must be protected. The Hon’ble Court did not consider a scenario where the legal heirs were not in the same business or were engaged in some other commercial activity separate from the deceased tenant. Notably, the Hon’ble Supreme Court further directed that the legislature should consider that the ground for eviction of statutory tenant available under Section 14(1) (e) of the Delhi Rent Control Act, for bonafide need of landlord to be applied at parity for both residential and commercial premises, even though the Delhi Rent Control Act specified that this ground is available only for residential premises.
Prior to this, in 1972, the Hon’ble High Court of Delhi in H.C. Sharma’s case had held that there was a clear object behind the classification of the premises into “residential” and “non-residential”, and that there was a nexus between the basis of such classification and the object sought to be achieved. Therefore, the Hon’ble High Court of Delhi had held that the classification/ discrimination did not violate Article 14 of the Constitution of India, because it was created in view of the partition of the Country to provide availability of commercial space for rehabilitation of persons migrating to New Delhi in 1947 when there was a large influx of refugees.
Twenty-five years after this, the Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of Malpe Vishwanath Acharya v. State of Maharashtra3 in 1997, while considering the reasonableness of the provisions of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, held that “a statute which when enacted was justified may, with the passage of time, become arbitrary and unreasonable”, and that what may have been reasonable in the 1940s, 1950s or 1960s can no longer be regarded as reasonable and the continuance of such a law itself became arbitrary.
In 2008, the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India, in its decision in the case of Satyawati Sharma v/s. Union of India 4, made a drastic change of approach. The Hon’ble Supreme Court held that in the past 50 years much water has flown down the Ganges. It was noted that in the early 1950’s till 1990’s the Courts leaned heavily in favour of tenants. The reason being that they wanted to achieve the aim with which the rent control act was enacted. However, the said purpose had been long achieved. Those who had came from west Pakistan as refugees and even their next generations have settled down in different parts of the country. Many of them have also held high posts and have done well. The Hon’ble Supreme Court held that the reasons which existed earlier no longer existed, and therefore, Section 14(1) (e) of Delhi Rent Control Act is discriminatory and it violates Article 14 of the Constitution of India insofar as it is made applicable only to residential premises. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, struck down the said discrimination in the Delhi Rent Control Act and declared that the ground of bonafide need of the landlord available for seeking eviction of a tenant will apply to both residential as well as to commercial premises. The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India, while noting that Section 14(1) (d) of the Delhi Rent Control Act, will have a bearing on the decision, did not render any findings in respect of the same, as the primary question which arose in that case was in relation to Section 14(1) (e) of the Delhi Rent Control Act.
This Judgment in the case of Satyawati Sharma has been followed and has stood the test of time. The Courts have given purposeful interpretation to say that bonafide need of a landlord is not to be confined by giving it a pedantic approach and limiting it to needs which are show to be pressing or compelling. Rather, it is the landlord who is the true judge of his need, as long as it is a bonafide need.
The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in its Judgment in the case of Saradamani Kandappan v/s. S. Rajalakshmi 5 again held that laws which may be reasonable and valid when made can become unreasonable and arbitrary with passage of time. The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in its decision in the case of Anuj Garg v/s. Hotel Association of India 6 again held that a legislation which may have been upheld as valid, keeping in mind the circumstances existing at the time when it was so held, can be declared as invalid with change of times.
The Hon’ble High Court of Delhi in its Judgment in the case of Shobha Agarwal & Ors. v/s. Union of India 7 rejected the challenge to various provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act. In respect of Section 14(1)(d), it was held that the period of 06 months of absence is justified. There is no discussion in the reported judgment as to whether or not the said section is discriminatory on the ground that it does not apply to commercial premises also.
Section 14(1) (d) of the Delhi Rent Control Act provides the Landlord a right to seek eviction of the tenant if the tenant has not been in occupation of the residence for a period of six months preceding the petition. Section 14(1) (h) of the Delhi Rent Control Act provides the Landlord a right to seek eviction of the tenant if the tenant has been allotted or has acquired a vacant residence. Section 14(1) (hh) of the Delhi Rent Control Act provides the Landlord a right to seek eviction of the tenant if the tenant has built a residence and 10 years have elapsed. Keeping in view the Judgment of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in the case of Satyawati Sharma, what, if any, can be the reason for this distinction to say that even if the tenant has not been using the commercial space, or has acquired / purchased another separate commercial space, yet he cannot be evicted from the tenanted premises, even though these are grounds under the Delhi Rent Control Act for seeking eviction of a statutory tenant from a residential premises. In the current time, is this not discriminatory and violative of Articles 14, 19, 21 and 300-A of the Constitution of India?
What was the aim of Delhi Rent Control Act?
Was it the aim of the legislature, that it should continue ad infinitum, and that a commercial property once given on rent to a tenant and covered under the provision of the Delhi Rent Control Act, would in perpetuity be vested with the tenant, even if the tenant himself does not use it, or the tenant has acquired a place of his own, or the tenancy will continue even after the death of the tenant even if legal heirs of the tenant are or were not working with, or in the same business for which the tenant was using the commercial premises given on rent?
The rent control legislations of several other states do not create any distinction between residential and commercial premises/ tenancies in respect of non-use of the premises as a ground for eviction of tenant. In this regard, Himachal Pradesh Urban Rent Control Act, 1987 8 , Andhra Pradesh Building (Lease, Rent and Eviction) Control Act, 1960 9, Haryana Urban (Control of Rent and Eviction) Act, 1973 10, East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949 11, Rajasthan Rent Control Act, 2001 12, Kerala Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1965 13, Karnataka Rent Act, 1999 14 and Maharashtra Rent Control Act, 1999 15 provide non-use of the premises as a ground for eviction in cases of both, residential and commercial tenancies/ premises. This classification between residential and commercial premises/ tenancies is unreasonable, unconstitutional as it violates Articles 14, 19, 21 and 300-A of the Constitution of India.
Is the Delhi Rent Control Act, required in the current times?
Recently, many states in the country, including Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Andhra Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir have enacted new tenancy laws, which are model laws and are progressive, inasmuch as they seek to create an equilibrium, and they do not create any special status in favour of the landlord, or of the tenant but they have been enacted with the intention to ensure that the terms of tenancy mutually agreed, are respected and are enforceable with the sanction of Law. Should Delhi also follow?
The author is an advocate practicing in Delhi
1 ILR (1973) I Delhi 90
2 1985(2) SCC 683
3 (1998) 2 SCC 1
4 2008(5) SCC 287
5 (2011) 12 SCC 18
6 (2008) 3 SCC 1
7 (2019) 256 DLT 210(DB)
8 Section 14(1)(v), Himachal Pradesh Urban Rent Control Act, 1987
9 Section 10(2)(v), Andhra Pradesh Building (Lease, Rent and Eviction) Control Act, 1960
10 Section 13(2)(v), Haryana Urban (Control of Rent and Eviction) Act, 1973.
11 Section 13(2)(v), East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949.
12 Section 9(k), Rajasthan Rent Control Act, 2001.
13 Section 11(4)(v)¸Kerala Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1965.
14 Section 27(2)(d), Karnataka Rent Act, 1999.
15 Section 16(1)(n), Maharashtra Rent Control Act, 1999.

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Yamuna Floods: Yamuna river rages, national capital Delhi drowns in misery | Delhi News


NEW DELHI: Continuous water discharge from the Hathnikund barrage in Yamuna Nagar district of Haryana on Thursday led to the worst flooding in the capital in 45 years.
Also See: Delhi Floods Live
The water began flowing into some of Delhi’s main arteries like Ring Road and GT Karnal Road and inundated the residential area of Civil Lines and transport hub ISBT at Kashmere Gate besides the low-lying areas near Kalindi Kunj.
After three critical water plants had to be closed because of ingress of water, late at night, the authorities were struggling to repair and open some gates at the ITO barrage and also fix a DJB regulator near the Indraprastha Metro station which collapsed under pressure, threatening to throw water further into the city, towards Mathura Road.

However, Central Water Commission (CWC) held out some hope. The water level at the Old Railway Bridge at 8 pm was 208.66 metres, three metres above the danger level. CWC said that between 2am and 4am on Friday, the level was expected to fall to 208.45 metres after which it was likely to decrease gradually.
However, conflicting reports from Hathnikund and UP about the threat becoming more intense left people in Delhi guessing after a nerve-wracking day when traffic got disrupted in some areas and visuals of people wading through water and NDRF teams rescuing people in distress dominated the day’s news.

02:33

Delhi: Flood-like situation in Yamuna Khadar area after rise in water level in River Yamuna

More than 23,000 people have been evacuated so far and those taking refuge in Delhi government shelters number 21,092, according to an official bulletin. “Precautionary and proactive relief and preventive measures” were being undertaken in areas like Sonia Vihar, Mukherjee Nagar and Hakikat Nagar which are susceptible to flooding.
Water lapping against the high walls of Red Fort harked back to the old days when the Yamuna used to flow there. Mangi Bridge, where earlier vehicles often used to get stuck, had a lot of water under it, making it impossible for vehicles to go through.
Metro remained the only reliable mode of transport in this area though the entry to the Yamuna Bank station had to be closed because of water accumulating outside. No one could go out either, although the interchange station continued to function.

02:13

Yamuna river water level surpasses danger mark in Delhi, submerges stretch of Ring Road

Flood water mixed with the murky drainage water, coming out because of backflow, had started entering Delhi roads from Wednesday night with waterlogging being reported on Ring Road near Rajghat and Rajpura Road. There was knee-deep water here in the morning.
The low-lying areas near Kashmere Gate were among the worst affected. Water gushed into 20 bungalows in Civil Lines and NDRF had to conduct a rescue operation with boats. The residences of chief minister Arvind Kejriwal and L G V K Saxena are located in this area.
Other areas of north Delhi that were submerged were the famous Changi Ram Akhara.
Urmila Kaliraman, wife of Changi Ram, told TOI that “there were over 50 wrestlers here but many have left. The temple and compound are flooded.” Some children could be seen swimming outside the centre.
Close to it, Delhi government’s sole trauma facility, Sushruta Trauma Centre and Shaheed Bhai Bal Mukund Government Sarvodaya Vidyalaya too were threatened by the advancing water.
Other areas which saw flooding were Shankaracharya Road, Shiv Vihar, Khajuri Khas and Kingsway Camp.
East Delhi, too, proved to be vulnerable. Flooding led to traffic stalling between Pushta Road and Shamshaan Ghat and Geeta Colony and Old Iron Bridge. Water had entered the Geeta Colony cremation ground, forcing it to be shut.
Kejriwal appealed to the residents of Delhi to avoid unnecessary travel and, if possible, work from home. “The government is committed to providing essential services and support to affected individuals. Efforts are underway to ensure that all basic facilities are made available in the relief centres established across the city,” he said.

Minister Saurabh Bharadwaj said in a statement that motorboats have been deployed at various places for relief and rescue operations.
The flyovers on Noida Link Road and the service road which goes towards ITO could be seen completely occupied by people who were evacuated from the Yamuna banks.
Sushma Devi, who was rescued on Wednesday, said: “We request the government to give us some compensation as people have lost their belongings and crops.”

Watch Unprecedented flood-like situation in Delhi: Rising Yamuna water floods Civil Lines area and several key roads

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Girl’s kin kill 20-yr-old for interfaith relation in Delhi | Delhi News



NEW DELHI: A 20-year-old man, who was in a relationship with a woman from another religion, was stabbed over a dozen times allegedly by her kin and his throat was also slit. Raj Kumar died on the spot, but the murder remained a mystery for a few days as the victim couldn’t be identified.
Police finally got clues using CCTV camera footage and their information network, and tracked down Ashfaq and Meraj, who were arrested from north Delhi’s Zakhira. They allegedly lured Kumar on the pretext of settling issues to Shehzada Bagh on July 2 and killed him.
DCP (north) Sagar Singh Kalsi said police got to know about a man’s body lying near a park in north Delhi’s Inderlok on July 3. The body, which was was stashed into the bushes, seemed to be of a 20-22-year-old man, but no document or a cellphone was found on him.
An FIR for murder was registered and two teams were formed to crack the case. While one team worked to identify the deceased, the other looked for clues and suspects. “Since there was no CCTV installed near the place, both tasks became a challenge. As the time of the incident was not clear, the CCTV footage of all exit and entry points around the scene of the crime was closely checked,” Kalsi said. Finally, the deceased was identified as Raj Kumar, who came from Araria in Bihar and used to live in north Delhi. Movements of two suspects were also observed in a footage around the spot.
The cops circulated the grabs among all boots on the ground and also activated their information network. Finally, an informer came forward with the identity of the duo. The accused told police that Kumar was in a relationship with a close relative of Ashfaq. This had angered them and they planned to eliminate him. “The accused were aware that Kumar rarely visited his home town and there would be no one to report if he goes missing and the body would remain unidentified,” the DCP said.
Two knives used in the crime have been seized. Bloodstained clothes of the accused have also been found, police said.

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After Pragati Maidan tunnel heist, 2 more Delhi businessmen robbed of Rs 7.5 lakh | Delhi News



NEW DELHI: Days after the Pragati Maidan tunnel heist, armed assailants looted two businessmen in north Delhi on Tuesday.
In the first case, a group of five men came on three bikes, pointed a pistol at the victim and his brother at their godown in Wazirabad and fled with Rs 3 lakh cash and some jewellery from the safe. In the second incident, armed assailants looted Rs 4.5 lakh cash from a businessman in Kashmere Gate and took away his Scooty. No arrests have been made in either case.
Nobody has been arrested yet.
Sunil Kumar Jain, who lives with his family in Bihari Colony in Shahdara, runs a khoya business. Police received a call around 1.15pm regarding the robbery at Yudhisthir Setu, and a team met the victim. Jain told them that he had gone to Khoya Mandi in Kashmere Gate for some business and was returning home. “When he reached Yudhisthir Setu on his two-wheeler, he got a phone call,” an officer said. He stopped the vehicle to take the call when two men came on the Scooty and started asking for money. When Jain objected, one of the accused pointed a gun-like object at him.
Meanwhile, their two associates came on a motorcycle and asked Jain to hand over the keys of his vehicle. “When I gave them the keys, they fled,” Jain said, adding that he had around Rs 4.5 lakh in the dicky. The victim then alerted police about the incident. It is being suspected that the accused were following the victim for some time and was waiting for the right moment to commit the crime. “The victim was not clear whether it was a real gun or some object the men used to threaten him,” an officer said.
On Saturday, four men on two motorcycles waylaid the cab of two cash delivery agents as soon as they entered the Pragati Maidan tunnel and snatched from them a bag containing around Rs 50 lakh. At least eight people have been arrested in the case.
Police have formed several teams to crack Tuesday’s case. A CCTV camera footage has surfaced in which the alleged suspects were reportedly seen crossing the road. However, cops are still identifying if the same people were involved in the heist. A case under IPC sections 394 (voluntarily causing hurt in committing robbery) and 34 (acts done with a common intention) has been registered at Kashmere Gate police station.

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Deepak Boxer Arrested: Most-wanted gangster Deepak Boxer brought to Delhi from Mexico | Delhi News



NEW DELHI: Deepak Boxer, one of the most-wanted gangsters in Delhi, was brought to the city from Mexico on Wednesday.

A team of Delhi Police’s Special Cell landed with Deepak at Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport at around 6am.
According to police, Deepak will be questioned in connection with his criminal activities and alleged involvement in killing a builder in north Delhi’s Civil Lines area.

“Action has been taken against the fugitives on the instructions of home minister. It is a big success that for the first time a criminal has been brought from a place like Mexico through coordinated action. The Special Cell of Delhi Police was following him for several months. There is no other bigger gangster in Delhi-NCR than this. Several teams have worked on this,” said HGS Dhaliwal, Special CP, Delhi Police.

Sleuths from the Special Cell and the United States’ FBI extracted Deepak on Monday evening. Deepak had fled to Mexico on a fake passport but had been located.
In mid-February, the Special Cell and Crime Branch received inputs that Boxer had left the country. Digging deeper in the fugitive’s case, the investigators stumbled upon a passport used by Boxer in fleeing the country. They then took the help of immigration and intelligence agencies to trace the journey of the passport holder.

Extensive interrogation and technical procedures lasting almost a month revealed that Boxer, after fleeing India on a fake passport, reached Mexico after halting in several countries.
The passport used by Boxer was issued in Bareilly in UP in the name of one Ravi Antil. It was used by Boxer to fly to Dubai from Kolkata airport in January this year, the cops found. The Special Cell then registered an FIR on March 16 and launched a massive, multi-continental and a joint police and administrative effort to bring the fugitive back.

For about a week, all Boxer’s old henchmen, associates and close relatives were thoroughly interrogated. His location was subsequently tracked to Cancun in Mexico. The Indian embassy in Mexico City also joined the process, and a team of experienced field officers from Delhi Police was flown to the Mexican capital.
(With inputs from PTI and ANI)





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Ashram flyover unknotted, Delhi cops fear choke point at Sarai Kale Khan | Delhi News



NEW DELHI: The extension of Ashram flyover in south Delhi was inaugurated, after missing several deadlines, by chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Monday. Though the facility promises to ease vehicular movement between Noida and south Delhi, the traffic police are apprehensive of the vehicular choke point now shifting to Sarai Kale Khan.
The Ring Road near Sarai Kale Khan inter-state bus terminal sees heavy traffic throughout the day. With the flyover extension now providing a quick approach to east and north Delhi from south of the city, the stretch may buckle under the added load and the work going on to develop the spot as a transport hub.
Ongoing construction of the Delhi-Meerut Regional Rapid Transit System and a parallel flyover have already made Sarai Kale Khan a traffic chicken neck worsened by numerous buses entering and exiting the bus terminal. Pedestrians, among them construction workers, regularly cross Ring Road, further slowing traffic.
“Fast-moving vehicles on the new flyover, heavy vehicles on Ring Road and traffic coming from AIIMS on Barapullah elevated road all merge at the same point,” pointed out a traffic officer. “So, traffic is going to remain heavy at Sarai Kale Khan all the time.”
Flyover Out Of Bounds For Heavy Vehicles
The 1.4km extension of the existing flyover at Ashram, which took 32 months to complete and cost Rs 128 crore, will provide a direct route between the DND Flyway and AIIMS. At least 3.5 lakh vehicles pass through Ashram every day. On Monday, PWD opened the main extension road and the carriageway going towards Sarai Kale Khan, though the ramp between Sarai Kale Khan and Ashram is still under construction and may take over a month to complete. Heavy vehicles will not be permitted yet on the new flyover because of the presence of high-tension electricity wires passing above.
According to PWD officials, the high-tension wires hang above the two main ramps and could prove dangerous for heavy vehicles passing below. The agency has not yet asked Delhi Transco Limited to relocate the high-tension wires. PWD engineer-in-chief Anant Kumar said another organisation had to remove the wires. “But we ourselves have undertaken the task and hope to have done it by the end of this month. After that, heavy vehicles will also be allowed to drive on the flyover,” said Kumar.
At the inauguration, Kejriwal said there used to be long traffic jams in this area earlier, particularly during the office hours, and the extension of the flyover would bring relief to the lakhs of motorists who use the route every day. The CM added that only a few minor tasks were left to be finished before the flyover became fully operational.
Soon after the inauguration function got over, traffic was permitted from the DND Flyway towards Lajpat Nagar. The second ramp was opened around 5pm, the traffic police’s advisory said.
Some other works that remain to be completed included the construction of the central verge near the integration of the extension with the existing flyover, installation of road signage and the construction of the ramp for traffic coming from Sarai Kale Khan and bound for Ashram.
The erection of the RRTS piers at Sarai Kale Khan will take three more months, while work on the parallel flyover will only start at 2023-end. “Till all construction work is finished, the smotorists cannot expect the traffic movement to ease here,” said an officer of the Delhi traffic police.





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Fir: Delhi Development Authority asks CBI to file FIR against 39 of its officers | Delhi News



NEW DELHI: Cracking down against “corruption and negligence” at the top level, the Delhi Development Authority has asked the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to register an FIR against 39 of its officers apart from various contractors who were involved in “faulty construction” of multi-storey Signature View Apartments in north Delhi’s Mukherjee Nagar area in 2009 and putting hundreds of lives at risk.
The officials who will be probed by the investigating agency include three DDA members (engineering), six chief engineers, nine superintending engineers, nine executive engineers, four assistant engineers and eight junior engineers.
Taking serious note of “grave lapses” in construction of the apartment complex, LG V K Saxena had asked the authority on January 24 to initiate criminal proceedings against the erring contractors, builders and construction agencies while conducting a vigilance inquiry to identify all DDA officials responsible for lapses and misconduct and begin criminal proceedings against them.
Built during 2007-2009, the 336 flats — 112 MIG and 224 HIG — in Signature View Apartments were allotted to residents in 2011-12 but the buildings became structurally unsafe within a few years.
“The action is a stern message from the LG to all government officers against any collusion, misconduct, laxity. There is zero tolerance for corruption and any compromise with the interest and safety of the people of Delhi will not be tolerated,” a Raj Nivas official said.
According to officials, the construction agencies against whom the DDA has requested the CBI to register FIR included Winner Construction Pvt Ltd and Grover Construction Pvt Ltd apart from two testing agencies — Bharat Test House and Delhi Test House — for offences of “cheating, criminal breach of trust, endangering life and public safety of others and other relevant provisions of the Prevention of Corruption Act”.
A senior Raj Nivas official said that a vigilance inquiry established “collusion” between the DDA officials and builders and contractors resulting in “compromising the quality and structural safety requirement during the construction, thereby causing wrongful loss to DDA besides putting to peril the lives and property of hundreds of residents”.
The vigilance inquiry also found out that the provisions pertaining to quality control as mentioned in the contract and the CPWD manual were bypassed, owing to which the construction failed in less than a decade, said an official.
“The concrete in the structure at most locations was found to be of a lower grade. Despite several repairs, the structural stability continued to fail to an extent that an independent expert suggested immediate evacuation,” an official quoting the vigilance department report said.
“It was the duty of the contractor and officers concerned to ensure that prescribed norms of quality control and terms and conditions of the agreement were followed. It appears that either the officers failed to point out deficiencies during construction or effectively colluded with the agency to compromise the quality and provide wrongful gains to the agency,” the official added.
A study conducted by an IIT-Delhi expert found the building to be structurally unsafe and recommended that it may be vacated and dismantled at the earliest. The LG in January asked the DDA to draw up a redevelopment and rehabilitation plan in consultation with the RWA.





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Nikki Yadav murder case: Delhi Police takes Sahil Gehlot to crime scene in Kashmiri Gate | Delhi News


NEW DELHI: Sahil Gehlot, accused of killing his live-in partner Nikki Yadav, was taken to the crime scene in Kashmiri Gate by Delhi Police on Thursday.
Gehlot had allegedly strangled Yadav (23) in a car in north Delhi’s Kashmiri Gate area.

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Love, murder and marriage, all in one day: Nikki Yadav’s killing shocks Delhi

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According to sources, the police are reviewing the CCTV footage in the area and have called in Ashish, Gehlot’s brother, for questioning. It is alleged that Yadav was strangled with a data cable in Ashish’s car by Gehlot.

Police will also take Gehlot to Nizamuddin and Anand Vihar railway stations, where he had taken Yadav in the car the day he killed him. The complete sequence is being connected so that the exact place and time of Nikki’s murder can be known, sources said.

After he killed her, as is alleged, Gehlot stuffed the woman’s body inside a refrigerator at his dhaba in southwest Delhi and went to his wedding the same day.

Delhi: Man kills girlfriend, stuffs her body inside refrigerator of his restaurant

The incident came to light on February 14, Valentine’s Day, four days after the fact, when Gehlot under police custody confessed to the crime and led police to the fridge in his eatery where he hid the body.
The post mortem of Yadav’s body went on for over two hours on Wednesday at Deen Dayal Upadhyay hospital here, and according to the preliminary opinion of doctors, the cause of death was strangulation.
She had no other injury marks on her body, besides the strangulation marks.
According to police, Gehlot had concealed from Yadav that he was engaged to marry some other woman, and when the detail came out, the two had a row which culminated in Gehlot killing the woman.
(With inputs from PTI)





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Delhi L-G takes ‘serious note’ of lapses in DDA apartments


Lieutenant Governor Vinai Kumar Saxena Tuesday ordered the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) to redevelop the Signature View Apartments complex at North Delhi’s Mukherjee Nagar and rehabilitate the residents in the interim as the complex is structurally damaged.

Saxena, L-G House officials said, has taken “serious note” of lapses that resulted in the building becoming structurally unsafe in just about 10 years of its construction. He also ordered the immediate initiation of criminal proceedings against the contractors, builders or construction agencies involved.

The L-G ordered a vigilance inquiry to identify all officers and government officials responsible for alleged lapses and misconduct in the construction within 15 days and the initiation of criminal action against defaulting officials.

The Signature View Apartment complex, built during 2007-2009, was allotted to the residents in 2011-2012. Later, the flats started facing construction-related issues, forcing the residents to complain about them to the DDA.

A 2021-2022 study conducted by IIT Delhi, commissioned by the DDA, found the building to be structurally unsafe with a recommendation to “vacate and dismantle” it.

“This should serve as a message from the L-G to all officials and contractors that no laxity, misconduct or collusion will be tolerated and that the residents are supreme,” an L-G House official said.

The L-G, according to the official, overruled the DDA that was “shirking its responsibility” by maintaining on file that, “These allotments are not part of Social Welfare Schemes; that there is no law which makes DDA responsible for building in perpetuity, or even in the period in question or it is not the duty of DDA to maintain the buildings.”

In response, the official said, the L-G had said, “Apparently, there has been no application of mind on the part of the legal department of DDA and the position taken by the DDA, not only runs contrary to the very basic tenet of responsibility and empathy, essentially inherent in the functioning of any service provider, especially so, a government organisation, but also runs in contravention of the principle of natural justice, since the DDA had charged the consumer in the name of “Maintenance Charges for 30 years.”

Writing to the DDA, the L-G Secretariat has noted, “The hon’ble Lieutenant Governor, after going through these contentions of the legal department, has disagreed with the position taken by the DDA. It is not right to state that DDA has no responsibility in the instant matter. Viewing all the facts, Hon’ble Lt. Governor has taken a considered view that DDA must step in in this case in the larger public interest.”

The L-G Secretariat, in a note on January 23, asked the DDA to draw up a redevelopment and rehabilitation plan for the complex, in consultation with the RWA.

On its part, the association welcomed the move. “We, the residents of Signature View Apartments, Mukherji Nagar, are thankful to Delhi L-G V K Saxena for ordering the DDA to redevelop the entire apartment complex and rehabilitate the residents in the interim,” the RWA said in a statement, adding, “With this decision, the L-G has offered respite to the 336 families who had been struggling to convey the threats that loom over their daily lives to various government departments.”





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Snatchers strike, yet again: Shoot at, rob businessman of Rs 2 lakh in Delhi’s Roop Nagar | Delhi News



NEW DELHI: Criminals continue to run amok on the streets of the city. If a businessman was targeted by snatchers in north Delhi’s Roop Nagar two days ago, another businessman was shot at by snatchers, this time in Shastri Nagar.
The incident was captured on a CCTV camera and the footage went viral on social media on Tuesday.
The incident took place around 6pm on Monday when the businessman was heading home after shutting shop. The snatcher on a motorcycle fired at the victim, who has a money exchange business, but he narrowly escaped with his life when the bullet only grazed him. The victim was taken to hospital for treatment and medical examination.
Police said that the criminals fled with around Rs 2 lakh. The cops are using the bike’s registration number to trace the culprits whose faces were obscured by helmets. An FIR has been registered and the Crime Branch and Special Cell have been asked to investigate.
It is being probed if this snatching was also the handiwork of assailants who targeted a businessman in Roop Nagar two days ago. Police are yet to make a breakthrough in that case but have recovered CCTV footage showing the brazenness of the criminals. The footage shows the businessman, identified as Bunny Kalra, not only being robbed and shot but also pinned to the ground and kicked several times by his attackers. They do this in full view of dozens of people, who can be seen on the video stopping to watch the drama but not intervening, obviously cowed by the threats of the criminals.
The 42-year-old victim was shot in his right leg and robbed of Rs 5 lakh by four men. Kalra was carrying the cash belonging to his employer. According to police, the incident took place on Saturday evening when Kalra, who works at a plastic granules shop in Kirti Nagar, was returning to his office on his motorcycle after collecting payment from a customer.
The cops are also yet to make any arrests in the case of a cash van robbery reported a few days ago in Wazirabad in north Delhi. Delhi Police has issued a sketch of the accused in the incident that was prepared on the basis of CCTV footage and details of his appearance given by the other staffers.
Police have recovered CCTV footage showing the assailant threatening the cash van custodian, Udaypal Singh, 55, with a weapon and then running away with the bag full of cash. The footage shows, on being threatened, the frightened guard handing over the bag with cash to the attacker. The assailants still shot dead Singh, who was on duty in the van belonging to the CMS company.





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