Pasayat may be deviating from a tacit understanding between Law_makers(or Brit 
hackneyed Law maintainers),Executive ,Judiciary. Each is supposed to live in 
water-tight and isolated No-Comments zones.
But  if you follow the logo "SATYAM eBA JAYATE" he is Telling the truth,all the 
truth and Nothing but the truth.So?What now?
Naxalism, Total Disintegration?
As they say--"Change--or  Die"
Again--Which?
MM


To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: 
Fri, 21 Dec 2007 11:40:26 +0530Subject: [WaterWatch] Justice Pasayat says 
environmental laws are "draconian"




Isn't Justice Pasayat pre-judging the cases that are before him against all 
canons of natural justice?Is our environmental laws really "draconian" as he is 
reported to have said. Did the rivers got heavily polluted even as these 
draconian laws were in place. These laws are draconian for whom. "Development 
at any cost" fundamentalists are on the prowl and newspapers like Indian 
Express are quite supportive of them. (Can't have draconian environment laws, 
says Supreme Court's 'green' judge, www.indianexpress.com/story/252765.html)The 
Courts and Judges are being misled by them. Is calling Hazardous waste as waste 
"too much protection", there is no rationale to redefine waste as material 
court as is being done by environment ministry. There is an emerging tendency 
to define forest as non-forest, river as non-river, waste as non-waste and 
agricultural land as non-agricultural land. There is no justification to take 
over agricultural land and turn it into a hazardous waste landfill in 
Najafgarh, Delhi for instance. The Central Ground Water Board study indicates 
that there massive danger of contamination of water in the area. More than 300 
villages are out to turn their battle against the proposed landfill into 
another Nandigram. The hazardous waste case is before the Justice Pasayat 
bench. The bench in its order in the Blue Lady/Hazardous Waste case dated 
September 11, 2007 had this to say citing its order in the forest case:The 
concept of "balance" under the principle of proportionality applicable in the 
case of sustainable development is lucidly explained by Pasayat, J. in the 
judgment of this Court in the case of T.N. Godavarman Thirumalpad v. Union of 
India and Ors. reported in (2002) 10 SCC 606 vide para 35 which reads as 
under:"35. It cannot be disputed that no development is possible without some 
adverse effect on the ecology and environment, and the projects of public 
utility cannot be abandoned and it is necessary to adjust the interest of the 
people as well as the necessity to maintain the environment. A balance has to 
be struck between the two interests. Where the commercial venture or enterprise 
would bring in results which are far more useful for the people, difficulty of 
a small number of people has to be bypassed. The comparative hardships have to 
be balanced and the convenience and benefit to a larger section of the people 
has to get primacy over comparatively lesser hardship."The above paragraphs 
indicate that while applying the concept of "sustainable development" one has 
to keep in mind the "principle of proportionality" based on the concept of 
balance. It is an exercise in which we have to balance the priorities of 
development on one hand and environmental protection on the other hand. The 
order that was ridden with incorrect citation and irrelevant quotations then 
goes on to say:India after globalization is an emergent economy along with 
Brazil, Russia and China. India has economic growth of above 9%. However, that 
growth is lop-sided. A large section of the population lives below poverty 
line. India has largest number of youth in the world. Unemployment is endemic. 
Article 21/14 is the heart of the Chapter of fundamental rights. Equality of 
opportunity is the basic theme of Article 14. In an emergent economy, the 
principle of proportionality based on the concept of balance is important. It 
provides level playing field to different stakeholders. ... When we apply the 
principle of sustainable development, we need to keep in mind the concept of 
development on one hand and the concepts like generation of revenue, employment 
and public interest on the other hand. This is where the principle of 
proportionality comes in. The order rationalises without correct citation by 
saying "This concept of balancing is given importance by Dr. Amartya Sen in his 
book"Development as Freedom"." Did any one find Dr. Amartya Sen arguing for 
such concept of balancing as we are being made to believe. The clarification 
application and the Najafgarh case is pending before the bench. 
---------- Forwarded message ----------From: Madhu Sarin <[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>Date: Dec 20, 2007 9:38 PM Subject: PTI release on Justice 
PasayatTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Forwarding another press release on what Justice Pasayat said at the seminar in 
Bhubaneswar - the fact that even this release mentions '300 reserve forests' 
and not protected areas reveals the frightening illiteracy about the country's 
forests and protected areas of a judge who is a member of the 'forest bench' in 
the highest court of the land!
Madhu




PTI/ESP NAT CES12-PASAYAT

12/20/2007 16:24:06

PASAYAT


Judge wants balance between green cover and currency 

Bhubaneswar, Dec 20 (PTI) Advocating a balance between the 'green cover' and 
'green currency,' Justice Arijit Pasayat of the Supreme Court came down heavily 
on those who focus "too much" on protection of forest and wildlife and in the 
process harm the society at large. 
Justice Pasayat, also a member of the apex court's environment and forest 
bench, said "two weeks back we were told there are more than 300 reserve 
forests in the country, but of them hardly 20 or 25 deserve to be called as 
reserve forests." 
"In more than one hundred of them (reserve forest), the only animal to be 
protected are probably a few stray cattle and a few dogs," he said, adding the 
money that the Centre provides for protection were used elsewhere. 
Justice Pasayat cited the case of Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary where he had 
put a stay on the construction of a bridge as an Orissa High Court judge. He 
was told that construction of roads and bridges inside the protected area would 
adversely affect the ecology of the place. 
When he later visited Bhitarkanika area, Justice Pasayat found children playing 
football in places which were said to be dense mangrove forest cover. "People 
were dying there due to snake bite as they failed to reach hospital in time 
owing to lack of proper roads and bridges," he said. 
Pasayat was speaking at a seminar on Tuesday. 
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