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A vacation bench of Justices B R Gavai and Hima Kohli rejected the PIL with costs and said the state cannot be prevented from making necessary arrangements to provide basic facilities to lakhs of devotees visiting the temple. The top court said there is no merit in the contention raised by the appellants. The bench also took exception to the filing of frivolous PILs and said most of such petitions are either publicity interest litigation or personal interest litigation.
”We are of the considered view that Public Interest Litigation other than being in the public interest is detrimental to the public interest. In the recent past, it has been noticed that there has been mushrooming growth in PILs. Many such petitions are either publicity interest litigation or personal interest litigation.
”We highly deprecate the practice of filing such frivolous PIL as it is nothing but an abuse of the process of the law. They encroach upon a valuable judicial time that could otherwise be utilized for considering genuine concerns. It is high time that such petitions are nipped in the bud so that development work is not stalled,” the bench said.
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Earlier, senior advocate Mahalakshmi Pavani, appearing for the petitioner, had said there’s a clear embargo and there can be no construction in the prohibited area. ”They (state government) did not even take permission to construct in the regulated area,” she had submitted.
The state, she had said, got a no-objection certificate from the National Monuments Authority (NMA) and went ahead. She said the NMA could not have granted a valid certificate and this is something only the director of archaeology in the Central or the state government can do. Advocate General for Odisha Ashok Kumar Parija had submitted that under The Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act, the authority is the NMA, and the competent authority has been notified to be the Odisha government’s director of culture.
”Construction does not mean repairing or remaking existing structures or cleaning the sewage, drains, etc. This is how it is understood and DG ASI also understands the same way. ”Grant of the permission was by director culture… the director culture of the government of Odisha is the competent authority. What was prohibited within 100 meters was construction. The concept plan of the state aims to provide amenities and beautify the temple,” he had said.
He added that 60,000 people visit the temple every day and there is a need for more toilets.
”The amicus curiae in the case pointed out there was a necessity of more toilets and court had issued directions in that regard,” he had added.
The top court was hearing a plea filed by Ardhendu Kumar Das and others alleging illegal excavation and construction work by the Odisha government at the temple.
According to the petition, state agencies have been working in gross violation of Section 20A of The Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act, 1958. The plea alleged that the Odisha government is carrying out unauthorized construction work. This poses a serious threat to the structure of the ancient temple, it said.