Unauthorised
hawkers have virtually taken over every street in the city leaving no place for
pedestrians, the Bombay High Court has observed, asking why ordinary citizens
should not get the treatment that only "VVIPs" seem to get.
A
division bench of Justices MS Sonak and Kamal Khata, in an order on June 25,
said the problem has reached "alarming proportions", and the
government and civic body cannot take their own "sweet time" to deal
with it.
A
copy of the order became available on Tuesday.
The
high court last year took suo motu (on its own) note of the issue of illegal
and unauthorised hawkers and vendors in Mumbai and initiated this petition.
The
court has issued several directions to the Maharashtra government and the Brihanmumbai
Municipal Corporation but their implementation continues to be a casualty, the
judges said.
"The
hawkers and street vendors have virtually taken over the street lanes and
bylanes. There is no place for people to walk on the footpaths," the HC said.
Pedestrians
have to navigate between unauthorised hawkers and haphazardly parked vehicles,
it noted.
"Merely
because members of the public are tolerant or possibly fed up with complaining
any more to the civic authorities does not reduce the magnitude of this problem
or their immense sufferings....The public cannot be made to wait endlessly and
keep tolerating this intolerable situation," it said.
Whenever
the civic body conducts an anti-encroachment drive, hawkers and vendors return
within a few minutes, the high court said.
When
some VVIP visits the city, all roads and footpaths are cleared and sometimes
even potholes are filled up, it noted.
"Do
not the law-abiding citizens with whose money these VIPs function deserve the
same treatment? Isn't it their right to insist that laws are obeyed and, if not
voluntarily obeyed, enforced by the executive arm?" the HC asked.
The
petition was initiated two years back but the issue of illegal/ unlicensed
street vendors multiplies daily, the court said, adding, "the state and
BMC cannot take their own sweet time on one pretext or the other."
The court asked the BMC, police and the state government to file affidavits,
stating what action they have taken against illegal hawkers.