Falconer
FULL MEMBER
New Recruit
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2008
- Messages
- 98
- Reaction score
- 0
PUBLIC land like parks should be run by public entities. This was the gist of the 62-page Supreme Court verdict on private development/commercial activities in a major Islamabad park. The verdict on Fatima Jinnah Park reinforces a 2006 SC ruling directing the Capital Development Authority to cancel its lease to a private concern for developing a mini golf course in another park. The latest verdict directs the CDA to cancel a lease to a private entity running an international fast food chain, an allotment to another running a library and an under-construction private club project. The difference this time is that the SC has suggested ways of turning the unlawful developments into amenities for the public. The library is to be returned to the original public owner the ministry of education that will run it with private representation. The citizens club is to be converted into a public welfare project. In the case of the fast food outlet, the CDA has to frame and get approved regulations legalising the presence of a restaurant in that portion of the park. If not done within three months, the outlet will be demolished.
Pegged on provisions in the Islamabad Land Disposal Regulations 1993, which disallow allotment of plots in parks to private organisations, and the CDA Ordinance 1960, which states that public parks and playing fields are to be developed and maintained by the authority, the SC verdict is also an indictment of public functionaries who carry out unlawful orders under pressure. Learning its lesson from the verdict the CDA should develop the park and other parks in Islamabad as soon as possible and in accordance with the law and approved master plans. This will not only benefit the general public but also ward off those unable to resist the temptation of profiting from unused public land.
Pegged on provisions in the Islamabad Land Disposal Regulations 1993, which disallow allotment of plots in parks to private organisations, and the CDA Ordinance 1960, which states that public parks and playing fields are to be developed and maintained by the authority, the SC verdict is also an indictment of public functionaries who carry out unlawful orders under pressure. Learning its lesson from the verdict the CDA should develop the park and other parks in Islamabad as soon as possible and in accordance with the law and approved master plans. This will not only benefit the general public but also ward off those unable to resist the temptation of profiting from unused public land.