Tree-felling row: Telangana submits report to Supreme Court panel

IANS April 11, 2025 216 views

The Supreme Court-appointed Central Empowered Committee is investigating tree cutting near Hyderabad Central University after allegations of environmental norm violations. Telangana government officials, student groups, and political parties have submitted their perspectives to the panel. The CEC, led by Siddhant Das, will visit the site and submit a comprehensive report by April 16. The Supreme Court has temporarily stayed further tree felling and development activities on the disputed 400-acre land.

"Even if it's not forest land, permission of CEC should be taken to cut trees" - Supreme Court Bench
Hyderabad, April 10: The government of Telangana on Thursday submitted its report to the Supreme Court-appointed Central Empowered Committee (CEC), which began its inspection of 400-acre land at Kancha Gachibowli near Hyderabad Central University (HCU) following allegations that the authorities resorted to tree cutting in violation of environmental norms.

Key Points

1

Supreme Court panel investigates tree felling at 400-acre site

2

Telangana officials meet CEC members to present land details

3

Student groups and political parties provide their perspectives

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CEC to submit report by April 16

After a visit to the land to assess the ground situation, the four-member CEC, headed by Siddhant Das, had a meeting with the state government officials.

Chief Secretary Santhi Kumari, Telangana State Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (TGIIC) MD Vishnuvardhan Reddy, Director General of Police Jitender and senior officials from Law, Revenue and Forest departments attended the meeting.

The state government officials submitted a report with all records pertaining to the land. They also briefed the panel on the recent developments.

The panel also had separate meetings with representatives of student groups, Hyderabad Central University authorities and leaders of Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Student groups, who had staged protests over tree cutting on the land, explained their viewpoint to the panel, which comprised members CP Goyal, Sunil Limaye, and JR Bhatt.

After the meeting with student bodies at MCRHRDI, the CEC met BRS leaders at a hotel. BRS leaders led by former minister T. Harish Rao presented their report to the panel.

The governing council of HCU explained their stand on the land and provided all the details.

At another meeting, BJP MPs apprised the panel of the situation created by the tree cutting.

The CEC will hold consultations with NGOs and other stakeholders on Friday and submit its report to the Supreme Court on April 16.

Earlier, senior officials accompanied the committee members during the field visit.

Police made elaborate security arrangements on the HCU campus and the adjoining land in view of the recent protests by students over tree felling by TGIIC.

The TGIIC has installed boards at the 400-acre site, stating that the land belongs to the Telangana government.

The CEC is undertaking the visit at the direction of the Supreme Court, which stayed tree felling and other works by the TGIIC.

The apex court on April 3 took serious note of the alleged destruction of vast green cover by the TGIIC in violation of environmental norms.

A bench of Justice B. R. Gavai and Justice A. G. Masih had asked Telangana Chief Secretary what was the urgency to undertake development activity, including the clearing of trees.

The apex court's observations came after the Registrar of the Telangana High Court visited the land and submitted a report on its direction the same day.

The registrar stated in his report that about 100 acres of land had been cleared. Observing that it is a serious matter, the bench wanted to know if the authorities had required permission.

The court observed that even if it's not forest land, the permission of the CEC should be taken to cut trees. It asked CEC to visit the site and submit a report by April 16.

The apex court also asked the state government to file an affidavit and posted the matter for further hearing on April 16.

The court heard the matter after senior advocate K. Parmeshwar, the amicus curiae in forest cases, made an oral mention of tree felling on the land.

The state government has already passed an order allotting the land to TGIIC for developing the same and auctioning it for setting up IT parks. The government claims that there is no forest on the land.

Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
This is so disappointing! We need to protect our green cover, not destroy it for IT parks. Hope the Supreme Court takes strict action. 🌳
R
Rahul S.
While development is important, the government should have followed proper procedures. Cutting 100 acres of trees overnight seems reckless.
A
Anjali M.
Kudos to the student groups for standing up for the environment! Their protests brought this issue to national attention. 👏
V
Vikram P.
The article mentions the land isn't forest land - does that make the tree cutting legal? Genuine question as I'm confused about environmental laws here.
S
Sanjay R.
While I support environmental protection, we also need IT infrastructure for jobs. Maybe there's a middle ground - develop part of the land while preserving green spaces?
N
Neha T.
The Supreme Court's intervention is timely. Hope this sets a precedent against unauthorized tree cutting across the country. Our cities desperately need more trees, not less!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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