It
is time for the administration to wake up from "deep slumber" and
take appropriate steps to address the condition of city's coaching centres, the
Delhi High Court has said, while granting interim bail till November 30 to four
co-owners of the basement of an Old Rajinder Nagar building that housed a
coaching centre where three civil services aspirants drowned in July.
Justice
Dinesh Kumar Sharma, in the order passed on September 13 on the bail
applications of the accused, lamented the administration's "callous
attitude", saying said such "incidents keep on happening" and
innocent people lose their lives because of "mischievous people" who
only want to earn money.
Children
from across the country come to the capital for their education and it is
unfortunate that coaching centre owners have no care for such innocent lives,
the judge said in the order released on the court's website.
Justice
Sharma urged the Lieutenant Governor (LG) to appoint a committee, preferably
under a former judge of the high court, to inspect all coaching centres and
give suggestions to ensure that they do not run in unsafe buildings or unsafe
conditions.
The
committee may include other responsible officers and vice-chairman of the Delhi
Development Authority (DDA) in order to explore the possibility of having such
institutions in "one newly developed institutional area with all the
modern amenities and civic facilities", added the court, as it sought a
report from the proposed committee in three months.
"The present incident in which three young
bright students lost their lives is very unfortunate and is an alarm bell. This
court earlier also has flagged the issue of running of unauthorised coaching
centres, but unfortunately the civic authorities have failed to take any
action," the court said.
Parents
of such students send their children to the coaching institute shelling out
substantial money from their hard earned income with an aspiration that their
children will become something in their lives, it said.
"It
is unimaginable that the parents get back the dead bodies of their children on
account of such an unfortunate incident. The court considers that the time has
come that now the administration has to awake from the deep slumber and has to
take appropriate steps," added the court.
With
the aim to create a corpus to deal with such incidents, the court directed the
four basement co-owners to deposit Rs 5 crore, in one go or in instalments,
till November 30, with the Red Cross Society.
The
LG shall ensure that the funds are used for the welfare of students and
streamlining the functioning of coaching centres, the court said, adding he may
also take a decision on providing compensation to the families of the deceased.
"The
students from all parts of the country come to this capital city for
education/coaching. They have no option but to adjust to these unhygienic and
bad conditions. Though no steps are being taken despite several directions but
it does not mean that court will stop giving such directions. The courts will
ensure that concrete steps are taken for the redressal of the system,"
said the court, while adding that it cannot be a "mute spectator".
Three
civil service aspirants -- Shreya Yadav (25) from Uttar Pradesh, Tanya Soni
(25) from Telangana and Nevin Delvin (24) from Kerala -- died after the
basement of the building housing Rau's IAS Study Circle was flooded following
heavy rain in central Delhi's Old Rajinder Nagar on July 27.
The
co-owners of the basement had sought bail on the ground that they are merely
the landlords of the basement which was let out on rental basis to the coaching
centre and, therefore, they had no role whatsoever in the unfortunate event.
In
the order, the court asserted that the case was "very serious" and
the petitioners cannot be deemed to not have knowledge that letting out their
premises for commercial purpose may be dangerous.