Bombay High Court Terms Open Manholes As ‘Death Traps’, Directs BMC To Cover Them Immediately

The court said it wants all the open manholes covered by November 28 and directed the civic body to submit a compliance report on December 1.

Bombay High Court (Photo Credits: Wikimedia Commons)

Mumbai, November 22: The Bombay High Court on Tuesday took serious note of open manholes in the city terming them as "death traps", and directed the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) to cover these up immediately.

A division bench of Chief Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Abhay Ahuja was hearing petitions raising concerns over potholes on city roads causing accidents. On Tuesday, advocate Ruju Thakker, representing one of the petitioners, pointed out that there were around 300 open manholes on the service road of the Eastern Express Highway. Bombay High Court Refuses To Grant Divorce to Man Who Falsely Claimed His Wife Was HIV Positive.

Though several complaints had been lodged with the authorities, not a single manhole has been covered, she claimed. The bench then asked the BMC's counsel Anil Sakhare to verify if this was true.

The court said it wants all the open manholes covered by November 28 and directed the civic body to submit a compliance report on December 1. Thakker further cited a recent incident where a woman fell into an open manhole at Vasai and died. Bombay High Court Says Labeling Husband As ‘Womaniser’, ‘Alcoholic’ Without Proving Allegations Sans Proof ‘Cruelty’.

Advocate Swati Sagwekar appearing for the Vasai Virar Corporation then said that only a few manholes were open and these were less than three feet deep. To this, Chief Justice Datta remarked, "So three feet open manholes are not death traps?" "Even if one does not die, people may fracture themselves," the court said.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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