India

High Court Rejects Meghalaya’s Proposal For Illegal Mining And Advises Deployment Of 10 CISF Companies

The Meghalaya high court rejected an elaborate plan to deploy nearly 160 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) companies to check illegal coal mining and transportation in the state, instead deploying 10 Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) companies that can operate independently.

A central police force company has a sanctioned strength of 135 personnel, but the operational strength is closer to 100.

The bench stated that the state government had presented a grandiose plan that would not only cost the state hundreds of crores of rupees but would also take a long time. The high court also took note of the Centre’s contention that the CRPF personnel would be subject to state jurisdiction and that the CISF, which was formed to protect critical infrastructure, would be more appropriate for the job.

The bench, which included Chief Justice Sanjib Bannerjee, Justices H Thangkhiew, and Justice W Diengdoh, frowned on the state’s proposal, saying it could deplete the state’s coal reserves by the time it was implemented.

Statement by Meghalaya high court

“Though the state has indicated in great detail the number of companies to be deployed in the 12 districts, including bifurcating the companies involved in checking vehicles and others involved in checking mining activities, the cost implications, even on a short-term, temporary basis, may make it infeasible. In fact, the State has budgeted a total of 316 crores for the construction of quarters and barracks, and it spends more than 58 crores annually on requisitioning vehicles. In any case, it would take a long time to finish the development, and it would be impossible to house 160 firms temporarily even if the infrastructure built could be used by the State once the CRPF was no longer needed. By the time the State’s great plan is implemented, its coal supplies may really be depleted”, the court said.

The judges decided that instead, “it appears fair and reasonable to this court to deploy 10 companies, not of the CRPF but of the CISF. This is so that, as the Central government rightly notes, the CISF may operate freely while the CRPF is under the direction of the state police. The federal government responds that the CISF would be competent to handle the element of inspecting cargo vehicles in response to a court inquiry”.

The court stated, “When CISF is engaged in inspecting the vehicles, there is little question that it would also check for contraband and make sure that the goods vehicles comply with the weight limitations for plying on the state and national highways in Meghalaya”.

Also read: Signature Bank Collapsed After Its Crypto Leap

Spriha Rai

Recent Posts

HAL Revives Nashik Plant To Boost Su-30MKI Production & IAF Combat Readiness

In order to strengthen India’s defense capabilities, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) has announced the reopening…

51 seconds ago

India’s Exports Show Strong Growth In October; Trade Deficit Widens

India’s merchandise & services exports reached USD 73.21 bn in Oct 2024, a 19.07% year-on-year…

25 minutes ago

Leaders Extend Warm Wishes On Guru Nanak Dev’s 555th Birth Anniversary

On Guru Nanak Dev's 555th birth anniversary, President Murmu, PM Modi, and Home Minister Shah…

1 hour ago

Delhi-NCR’s Air Quality Remains Hazardously Poor; AQI Hits 409

Delhi-NCR’s air quality continued to remain dangerously poor for the third straight day, with the…

2 hours ago

Telangana Issues Warning To Diljit Dosanjh Ahead Of ‘Dil-Luminati’ Concert

The Telangana govt has issued a notice to Punjabi singer Diljit Dosanjh, instructing him not…

2 hours ago

Truck Drivers In Delhi Express Concerns Over Impact Of Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP-III)

The CAQM enforced Stage-III of the GRAP starting Friday, 15 November, as air quality in…

3 hours ago