City
Epaper

SC refuses to entertain plea of UOI against Karnataka HC's order of supplying 1,200 MT oxygen supply to state

By ANI | Updated: May 7, 2021 13:15 IST

Supreme Court on Friday refused to entertain a petition filed by the Centre, against a direction of the Karnataka High Court's order on May 5, directing the supply of oxygen to the state to upto 1200 MT per day from the sanctioned allocation of 965 MT.

Open in App

Supreme Court on Friday refused to entertain a petition filed by the Centre, against a direction of the Karnataka High Court's order on May 5, directing the supply of oxygen to the state to upto 1200 MT per day from the sanctioned allocation of 965 MT.

A bench of two judges of the Apex Court, headed by Justice Dr Dhananjaya Y Chandrahud and also comprising Justice M R Shah, refused to entertain the petition filed by the Union of India (UOI).

"We are not inclined," a bench of the Apex Court led by Justice Chandrachud said.

The Centre had yesterday filed by appeal before the Apex Court challenging the Karnataka High Court's order on Wednesday directing the Centre to supply oxygen to the state (Karnataka) upto 1,200 MT per day from the sanctioned allocation of 965 MT.

The Centre sought a direction from the top court for a stay of the order and direction.

The Solicitor General (SG) Tushar Mehta, senior lawyer appearing for the UOI, submitted to the Supreme Court that the issue of allocation of Oxygen is a pan India concern and worry, and if all the state High Courts came in and try to sort thinking about it, like this, this will be unworkable and "it is a concern and the situation would be chaotic."

The Centre is willing and ready to engage with the Karnataka state government to convene a meeting with the concerned authorities and or officials and reach a satisfactory conclusion.

"In the interest of the citizens, and for all, we will sit with the state government and will try to reach a solution in the issue," the SG Mehta submitted to the Court.

Mehta further said that it would create great difficulty if all state High Courts start passing order for supply of Oxygen to state.

He also submitted that let the entire stock of oxygen be handed over to High Court which will be decided on how to distribute among different states.

The Apex Court after due consideration and deliberations, refused to interfere with the Karnataka High Court's order.

The High Court had in its order had directed the supply of oxygen to the state to upto 1200 MT per day from the sanctioned allocation of 965 MT.

While refusing to interfere with the order, Justice Chandrachud said: "It is extra ordinary and well calibrated exercise of judicial power."

"We will not interfere with this today. Its a well-considered exercise of power by the (Karnataka) High Court. If it was a breach of executive power etc then we would have considered," the top court said.

( With inputs from ANI )

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

Tags: Karnataka High CourtSupreme Court
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalWho Is Harish Rana? Man in Coma for 12 Years Gets Right to Die After Supreme Court Order

MumbaiMumbai: Retired Bank Manager, Family Held in ‘Digital Arrest’ for 35 Days; ₹1.83 Crore Lost to Cyber Fraud in Mulund

InternationalDonald Trump's Global Tariffs Illegal : US Supreme Court Deals Major Blow to President

EntertainmentNeeraj Pandey Drops ‘Ghooskhor Pandat’ Title; Supreme Court Closes Case

InternationalRamadan 2026 Moon Sighting in Saudi Arabia: Supreme Court of KSA Calls on Muslims to Search for Crescent on THIS Date

National Realted Stories

NationalMP minister Prahlad Patel calls for result-oriented grassroots governance at training valedictory event in Bhopal

NationalKTR meets former Congress leader Jeevan Reddy, invites him to join BRS

NationalMake public draft of Bill on sacrilege incidents: Punjab BJP chief

NationalBengal polls: Trinamool accuses Humayun Kabir of Rs 1,000 crore deal with BJP, AAUP chief hits back

NationalOperation Sindoor showcased multi-domain synergy, says Army Chief Dwivedi at Ran Samwad seminar