City
Epaper

MCD Standing Committee election: SC allows withdrawal of plea seeking contempt action against Mayor

By IANS | Updated: October 1, 2024 21:05 IST

New Delhi, Oct 1 The Supreme Court on Tuesday allowed the withdrawal of a plea seeking contempt proceedings ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 1 The Supreme Court on Tuesday allowed the withdrawal of a plea seeking contempt proceedings against Delhi Mayor Shelly Oberoi for "arbitrarily postponing" the election of a member of the Standing Committee of the MCD (Municipal Corporation of Delhi).

A bench of Justices Surya Kant and Ujjal Bhuyan observed that no clear case of contempt of the apex court’s orders was made out.

Sensing the disinclination of the apex court to entertain the matter, senior advocate Sonia Mathur, who appeared on behalf of BJP councillor Raja Iqbal Singh, sought liberty to withdraw the petition.

Ultimately, the plea was dismissed as withdrawn with the liberty to approach the appropriate forum. The plea, filed through advocate Shoumendu Mukherji, said that the scheduled election for the sixth member of the Standing Committee was adjourned twice by the Mayor, citing issues with carrying & usage of mobile phones in the voting area.

"The Mayor arbitrarily postponed the election to October 5, 2024, leading to concerns that the democratic process was being deliberately obstructed," it said.

However, Lt Governor V.K. Saxena ordered the MCD Commissioner to ensure the elections take place, issuing strict instructions to conduct the poll without further delay. On the directions of the Lt Governor, the MCD Commissioner decided to hold the polls on September 27, where the Additional Commissioner took over as the Presiding Officer instead of the elected Mayor.

The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) said that contrary to legal provisions, the Lt Governor empowered an IAS officer to convene the meeting, rendering the election both unconstitutional and unlawful. One of the members of the Standing Committee, Kamaljeet Sahrawat, resigned after being elected as a Member of Parliament in Lok Sabha polls.

In a judgment delivered in August, the top court upheld the decision of the Delhi Lt Governor to appoint 'aldermen' to the MCD without the aid and advice of the elected government. It ruled that the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act made by Parliament required the Lt Governor to act at his discretion and the power to be exercised is the statutory duty of the Lt Governor and not the executive power of the state.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIsraeli forces eliminated numerous Gaza terror commanders over past few weeks

InternationalE-Cigarette liquid smuggling operation thwarted

International"MP is fastest-growing economy, GSDP growth rate highest in last 10-12 years": Principal Secy Raghwendra Kumar Singh

InternationalMillions allocated for new database for AI development

International"MP govt made such policies under PM Modi's leadership that...": Mohan Yadav

National Realted Stories

NationalEight cities in Madhya Pradesh nominated for 'Swachh Survekshan Awards'

NationalMamata to lead rally against ‘harassment’ of Bengali-speaking migrant workers in other states

NationalAfter Manipur, Mizoram govt to soon start biometric enrolment of Myanmar refugees

NationalTwo cases filed for scuffle at Telangana MLC's office

NationalManipur logs five new Covid cases, state tally rises to 323