Jairam Ramesh also urged the Supreme Court, in the same spirit, to intervene to reverse what he said was the "weakening" of the National Green Tribunal by the Modi government
Jairam Ramesh. File Pic
With the Supreme Court taking a stern view of the pollution situation in the national capital, former environment minister and senior Congress leader Jairam Ramesh on Tuesday said both the Centre and the states have been complicit in their "inaction", reported news agency PTI.
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Jairam Ramesh also urged the Supreme Court, in the same spirit, to intervene to reverse what he said was the "weakening" of the National Green Tribunal by the Modi government, reported PTI.
Amid a spike in pollution levels in Delhi-NCR, the Supreme Court on Tuesday directed Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan to ensure crop residue burning was stopped "forthwith", saying it cannot let "people die" due to pollution, reported PTI.
Taking a stern view of states trying to shift blame to one another for the pollution, the bench observed there cannot be "political battle" all the time, reported PTI.
Reacting to the Supreme Court's observations, Jairam Ramesh said, "The Supreme Court has had very strong words to say about the dangerous levels of air pollution in the nation's capital. But it is a crisis that affects entire north India, especially. Both the Centre and the states have been complicit in their inaction," reported PTI.
"It would also be in the public interest if the Supreme Court in the same spirit intervenes to reverse the weakening of the National Green Tribunal by the Modi government," the Congress general secretary in-charge communications said, reported PTI.
The NGT was created by Parliament in 2010, but since the past few years a systemtic effort has been made to render it ineffective, he alleged, adding that public health has as a consequence suffered, reported PTI.
The apex court's observations came a day after the Delhi government announced its decision to implement odd-even traffic restriction plan from November 13, a day after Diwali, when pollution levels are likely to shoot up even further, reported PTI.
While hearing a matter relating to the debilitating air pollution in the Delhi-National Capital Region (NCR), the top court's bench flagged issues like crop residue burning, vehicular pollution and burning of waste in the open, reported PTI.
(With inputs from PTI)