City
Epaper

Bombay HC seeks to know from BMC about encroachments on King George hospital premises

By Lokmat English Desk | Updated: December 7, 2023 14:21 IST

In a notable observation, the Bombay High Court expressed concern about the growing encroachments within the premises of King ...

Open in App

In a notable observation, the Bombay High Court expressed concern about the growing encroachments within the premises of King George V Memorial Hospital in central Mumbai. The court emphasized the need to prevent a situation where the encroachments escalate to the extent that the entire facility might have to be converted into a slum scheme in the future.

The court said this was the last thing that the city needed. A division bench of Justices Gautam Patel and Kamal Khata on Wednesday (December 6) sought to know from the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM), also known as BMC, if there are any unauthorised or illegal encroachments in the hospital’s compound in central Mumbai.

The bench additionally issued an interim stay on the notices served to King George V Memorial Hospital, operated by a charitable trust, pertaining to the installation of protective fencing to deter illegal encroachments. These notices, issued in December 2021 and March 2022, had instructed the removal of fences erected by the hospital trust on specific sections of its compound.

The court noted that encroachments run to a pattern and follow a trajectory. We are particularly anxious to avoid a situation where at some point in the future the encroachments become so many that we are confronted with a possible proposal to convert the whole hospital into a slum scheme, the court said.

That is absolutely the last thing that this city needs, the bench said. The court directed the municipal corporation to file its affidavit detailing what it found on the hospital premises as both the notices mention that a site inspection was carried out. In other words, we would very much like to know whether the civic body noted any unauthorized constructions or occupancies in the open spaces or only saw the mild steel fence in respect of which it has issued a notice, the court said.

In its plea, the petitioner hospital trust argued the imperative need for erecting fences, citing the continuous illegal encroachments on substantial portions of the trust and hospital land over time. The plea highlighted that open spaces within the hospital compound had been encroached upon by unauthorized occupants and trespassers, posing a threat to the safety and security of both hospital staff and patients. 

Tags: Maharashtra NewsMumbai NewsBombay High CourtKing George Hospital
Open in App

Related Stories

PunePune: Blaze Erupts in Meter Room at Municipal Employee Colony, Ambil Odha (Watch Video)

MumbaiMumbai Tragedy: Two Workers Killed, Three Injured as Excavated Soil Collapses at Construction Site

MaharashtraNalasopara: Police Seize MD Worth ₹1.14 Lakh, Arrest Two After High-Speed Chase

MumbaiMumbai: NCB Mumbai Destroys 1.8 Tonnes of Mephedrone, 341 kg Other Seized Drugs in Major Pre-Trial Disposal Operation

MaharashtraMaharashtra Accident: Car Catches Fire After Head-On Crash with Luxury Bus on Nagar-Manmad Highway; 1 Dead

Maharashtra Realted Stories

MaharashtraMaharashtra: Bike Thief Dies in Head-On Collision While Fleeing; Two Others Seriously Injured

ThaneThane: Police Nab 36-Year-Old in Dombivli for Possessing Pistols, Cartridges & Weapons

MaharashtraNagpur: Police Bust Sex Racket at Hotel on Umred Road, Seize Cash, Mobile, CCTV DVR

MaharashtraMaharashtra Tragedy: 12-Year-Old Vasai Student Dies After Being Forced to Do 100 Squats as Punishment

PunePune: Speeding on Pune–Bengaluru Highway Continues Despite Strict Limits