The legal experts gathered at a conference in Kolkata on sustainable urban development.
A
forum of researchers, architects, urban planners and lawyers on
Tuesday emphasised on the importance of bringing necessary changes in
India's legislative framework to aid sustainable urbanisation and
develop smart cities in the country.
The
legal experts, gathered at a conference here on sustainable urban
development, organised by the Heidelberg University of Germany, and
Observer Research Foundation, Delhi, said changes in the law are
"absolutely necessary" to make the Union government's Smart
Cities Mission effective and successful.
"The
Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) Act in the country has many loopholes
in questions of accountability factors which need to be fixed. The
act lacks democratic character of our Constitution. Also, it lacks
the mechanism for grievance redress system," Uday Shankar of
IIT-Kharagpur said during his address on the first day of the two-day
conference.
The
professor, who did a comparative study of the Special Purpose Vehicle
Act and the Jharkhand's Municipal City Act of 2011, felt the
municipal act should be better framed to deal with issues of
urbanisation than the SPV Act of Smart Cities Mission.
Lawyers
Subhadip Biswas and Ranajit Roy said there is a need for a new set of
laws to take care of the post-construction period. They said laws
should be framed in accordance with Article 13 of the Indian
Constitution.
"Respective
laws concerning issues regarding smart cities needed to be amended in
accordance with the Article 13 to make implementation of smart city
policies in accordance with the Smart Cities Mission," the
lawyers said.
The
two day conference was co-organised by IIT Kharagpur, Impact and
Policy Research Institute (IMPRI), Delhi, University of Calcutta and
IGCC with support from Friedrich Naumann Stiftung.
Talking
about the issues of mobility in smart cities, ORF Kolkata Director
Ashok Dhar said the government should stop thinking about holistic
mobility development and focus on local-level comprehensive mobility
planning.
He
also said lack of clarity among the policy-makers and the ministers
would affect investment in the country, especially in the automobile
and petroleum sectors and felt "excessive dependence on Electric
Vehicles will only replace our dependence from oil to lithium,
which also needs to be imported and whose prices are escalating
rapidly."
Article
Source BS
No comments:
Post a Comment