Blame game in midst of building collapse tragedy
November 16th, 2010 - 7:29 pm ICT by IANS
New Delhi, Nov 16 (IANS) As the magnitude of the east Delhi building collapse tragedy unfolded Tuesday, the blame game too began. While the owner is on the run, the Delhi government blamed the civic authority for giving clearance to an unauthorised construction — and the latter washed its hands off.
The house collapse Monday night in Lalita Park area of Laxmi Nagar in east Delhi claimed the lives of at least 65 people and left 130 injured. Many people who resided in the five-storeyed building, inhabited by mostly migrants from Bihar and West Bengal, are still missing.
Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit has ordered a probe into the building collapse. She said: “Stringent action should be initiated against which ever department is responsible for this tragedy.”
Dikshit said a probe has been ordered into the collapse and blamed the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), which is led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), for issuing No Objection Certificate (NOC) to the building and also accused the local body of carelessness.
Dikshit, who heads a Congress government, questioned the role of MCD in allowing an unauthorised construction. She said it was a clear “case of negligence” that water which had accumulated in the building’s basement for over two months was not removed.
“A team will be probing; they will take in all the aspects of the construction and the reasons for the collapse will be detected,” she informed reporters.
Meanwhile, when IANS asked the civic authorities to provide details regarding the building they said they are busy in rescue and relief operations.
Yoginder Chandolia, chairperson of the Standing Committee of MCD, told IANS: “The building is located on the river bed of Yamuna and with the heavy seasonal rainfall and the recent floods, water reached the building’s foundation and weakened the structure resulting in the collapse.”
Blaming the Delhi government for the mishap, Chandolia, of the BJP, said: “The Delhi flood irrigation department (of the Delhi government) was responsible for checking stagnant water, and the MCD has little to do with it.”
According to residents of the area, the building that collapsed was located in an unauthorised colony that had been regularised. About eight such dilapidated buildings are there in Lalita Park, similar to the one that collapsed. The owner Amrit Singh is on the run along with his family.
Chandolia added that it is a known fact that the collapsed building was “unauthorised and it had been constructed without clearances and we have no responsibility in maintaining such unauthorised buildings”.
“Instead of blaming municipal authorities, let the Delhi government ask the Delhi Police to arrest the landlord who kept adding more floors. There were over a hundred people staying in a building which was around 15 years old. The MCD did not know it was going to collapse,” he said.
A Delhi government official, pleading anonymity, informed that it was the responsibility of MCD officials to alert residents about potentially dangerous buildings. The MCD is supposed to regularly inspect unauthorised colonies.
However, Chandolia declined to say when was the last time they had checked on the locality.
MCD Commissioner K.S. Mehra who visited the locality Tuesday morning admitted that MCD carries out surveys every year to detect dangerous buildings.
“We have set up an expert panel of structural engineers to identify unsafe buildings. We will be doing a survey in the area and take adequate action including demolition of such unsafe buildings,” he added.
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- MCD orders evacuation of 38 buildings near accident site - Nov 17, 2010
- Congress trying to save guilty building owner: BJP - Nov 18, 2010
- Only two of 38 unsafe buildings evacuated so far: MCD - Nov 18, 2010
- MCD razes unauthorised property - Nov 25, 2010
- Basements in buildings near Yamuna may be banned, says MCD - Nov 26, 2010
- Delhi death toll rises to 65, rescue efforts on (Second lead) - Nov 16, 2010
- Minister fears repeat of Delhi building collapse - Nov 24, 2010
- Delhi building collapse: 20 still buried under debris - Nov 17, 2010
- MCD engineers face heat after court rebuke - Dec 18, 2011
- Delhi death toll rises to 60, rescuers hunt for survivors (Lead) - Nov 16, 2010
- MCD demolishes two buildings in Delhi - Nov 20, 2010
- MCD seeks scrapping of property tax in unauthorised colonies - Nov 10, 2010
- Delhi Police do not help stop illegal construction: MCD - Nov 20, 2010
Tags: bharatiya janata party, bjp, building collapse, carelessness, chief minister, civic authorities, clear case, congress government, delhi government, east delhi, municipal corporation of delhi, municipal corporation of delhi mcd, objection certificate, recent floods, relief operations, seasonal rainfall, sheila dikshit, stringent action, west bengal, yamuna