Sunil.Baghel @timesgroup.com TWEETS @baghels
Just a day after converting reportsfromthisnewspaperintoa suo–motu public interest litigation, the Bombay High Court gave an earful to the Railway authorities on Saturday.
The division bench headed by Chief Justice Mohit Shah termed the Railway authorities insensitive and said they needed to wake up at least now.
The court was referring to the newspaper report published on January18about21-year-oldKharresident Zia-Ul-Aminuddin Shaikh, who died due to a cardiac arrest, hours after losinghisleftleginanaccidentatAndheristation.Theaccidentwasblamedon the gap between the platform and the compartment he was trying to board. Addressing Suresh Kumar, advocate for the Railways, the bench said, “Saturday’s newspapers report a third accident (that took place) in a similar manner. Your clients must wake up now at least. It appears that your officials don’t care for the life and limbs of people.”
The court further added that lives were being lost almost on a daily basis and the Railway authorities seemed to have become insensitive.
Since the January 11 Monica More incident,thishasbeenthirdsuchincident where a person met with an accident due to the uneven gap between the platform and the train’s footboard. While 16-year-old Monica lost both her arms, in the second incident in this series, 31-year-old electrician Tanvir Sheikh lost both his legs when he slipped through the gap between the platform and a coach at Kurla station on Wednesday evening.
The Railways’ advocate was present before the court as an activist had moved an application beforethebenchseekingtotaghisPILfiled on the issue ‘Railway passengers’ safety’ with the suo–motu PIL taken up by the Chief Justice on Friday. The HC rejected the application.
It also made clear that the main focus of the suo–motu PIL would be the gap between the platform and the train and autonomy of Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation.
Reproducing four Mirror reports – Mind the gap, Mumbai (January 14); Timeforsuburbannetworktosecedefrom rail ministry (January 15); Ambernath platforms pose daily risk for commuters (January 15); and City’s death-trap stations (January 17) – the court converted the matter to a PIL and posted its next hearing for February 13.
Chief Justice’s division bench has made the Union Railway Ministry, theRailwayBoard,Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation, and General Managers of Central, Western and Konkan railways respondents to the PIL.
Mumbai Mirror launched a sustained campaign against the railways’ failure to raise the height of suburban platforms and the absence of emergency medical care at stations. Noting thatthesuburbanrailwayservicescarry over 70 lakh passengers every day, the HC notice quotes from a report in this newspaper on how a Central Railway’s request to raise the height of platforms over and above the nationally prescribed parameters has been pending with the Railway Board for four years.