
Slamming the Centre, the Uttar Pradesh government and other authorities for the “apathy” and “lethargy” in their efforts to preserve and restore the Taj Mahal, the Supreme Court Wednesday summed up its anger and frustration in one line. “You can demolish it if you like,” it said.
A Bench of Justices Madan B Lokur and Deepak Gupta said: “You (government) can shut down the Taj. You can demolish it if you like and you can also do away with it if you have already decided. Uttar Pradesh (government) is not bothered. No action plan or vision document has come yet. Either you demolish it (Taj) or you restore it.”
The court directed the Centre to file an affidavit in two weeks detailing what has been done for the protection of the monument and plans of further action. The bench said it would hear the matter on a day-to-day basis from July 31.
PTI adds: The apex court has been monitoring development in the area to protect the Taj Mahal, built by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in the memory of his wife Mumtaz Mahal at Agra. Its construction was completed in 1643 but work continued on other phases of the project for another 10 years.
During the hearing, the Bench drew a parallel between the Taj Mahal and the Eiffel Tower and said the mausoleum was perhaps more beautiful, but India continued to lose tourists and foreign exchange due to the situation prevailing there.
“There is the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Perhaps it is nothing compared to Taj Mahal. 80 million people come there (Paris). This is eight times more than what we have. You can destroy the Taj, we don’t want to do it,” the court said.
Referring to the Eiffel Tower, the Bench said that in India, there were concerns about security, but in other countries, they have made towers like “TV towers” from where tourists can get a view of the entire city.
When one of the lawyers said that the vision document was being prepared, the Bench shot back, “Will the vision document come after the Taj is demolished? Taj Mahal has to be protected or the Government of India has to decide if it has to be demolished”.
On being asked by the court about the number of tourists visiting India last year, Additional Solicitor General A N S Nadkarni, appearing for the Centre, said the figure was about 10 million in 2017.
“There is sheer lethargy and apathy. People (abroad) are making money, but no one is bothered (here),” the court said.
When Nadkarni said that Union Tourism Ministry could give more details about the tourists visiting India, the bench observed, “Do you realise the loss to the country due to this sheer lethargy? Foreign exchange, infrastructure, everything is lost due to this. There is a loss to tourism. One monument can do it, but there is apathy.”
The top court also observed that despite there being a report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee, which dealt with the effects of pollution on Taj, the authorities have not bothered to take appropriate steps in this regard.
During the hearing, the bench was also informed that soon, online booking system would start at Taj Mahal where the tourist would be able to book high-end tickets.
One of the advocates also told the bench that soon there would be time restriction and time slot for the tourists visiting Taj.
Nadkarni told the court that IIT-Kanpur was conducting an assessment of air pollution level in and around the mausoleum and Taj Trapezium Zone (TTZ) and they would give their report within four months.
TTZ is an area of about 10,400 sq km spread over the districts of Agra, Firozabad, Mathura, Hathras and Etah in Uttar Pradesh and Bharatpur district of Rajasthan.
Nadkarni also said that a decision in this regard was taken in December last year and IIT Kanpur has started the assessment work.
“Why will it be done during the monsoons when the pollution level is already down,” the bench asked and termed the government’s affidavit in the matter was “vague”.
The bench also took exception to the question why only four ambient air quality monitoring stations were set up at Agra against 22 required.
It directed the Centre to file an affidavit in two weeks giving all details of what has already been done for protection of Taj and what the government intended to do further.
The court said the affidavit filed by the Centre giving some details of steps taken was “absolutely of no consequence” and it should specify every step in detail, along with a time- frame and responsibility and accountability of the concerned departments. It said that steps taken by the authorities appear to have a “negative effect” on Taj.
The bench also said that since the matter was lingering on for a long time and no concrete steps have been taken to restore the glory of Taj, it would take up the matter on a day-to-day basis from July 31.