AHMEDABAD, Jan 3: The Gujarat High Court on Wednesday pulled up the state government over the
non-payment of compensation to the kin of 16 sanitation workers who died during manual scavenging
between 1993 and 2014 and directed it to explain the reason in an affidavit.
The court of Chief Justice Sunita Agarwal and Justice Aniruddha P Mayee also wanted to know from the
state what steps it has taken to adopt the 2013 anti-manual scavenging law, and whether the
government was in a position to do away with the practice or still taking the help of sanitation workers
for it.
The court was hearing a public interest litigation (PIL) filed by Ahmedabad-based NGO Manav Garima,
seeking the implementation of the Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their
Rehabilitation Act, 2013.
When the petitioner’s lawyer informed the court that the family members of 16 deceased manual
scavengers were yet to be paid the compensation as per the Supreme Court guidelines, the court pulled
up the government and said the latter could not go on making payments to some and leaving out the
others.
It directed the principal secretary of the urban development and urban housing department to file his
personal affidavit to bring on record the reasons for non-payment of compensation to the families of
the 16 workers whose names were included in the list of deceased submitted by the petitioner.
The court also took note of another recent incident of manual scavenging in Bhavnagar city where a
sanitation worker of the civic body died of asphyxiation while another suffered serious injuries after
entering a sewage tank on the campus of the Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute
(CSMCRI) on November 10, 2023.
It permitted the petitioner to implead the civic body as a respondent with a direction for it to file an
affidavit to bring on record details concerning the incident. The court also directed the principal
secretary to submit a report regarding the same.
“This is not hide and seek, let us be clear about this. If the list (of victims) was there ..you have to give at
least this much explanation as to why you have not paid them, reason has to be there,” the Chief Justice
observed.
“What steps have you taken to adopt the zero manual scavenging policy …have you got the requisite
machines, are you in a position to do away with manual scavenging, or are you still taking help of these
people ..we want a clear answer,” she asked.
In a civil application filed in April last year in connection with a 2016 PIL, the petitioner claimed that the
government had failed to implement the provisions of the 2013 law that prohibits manual scavenging
and sought its direction for its proper implementation.
The high court had in 2016 directed the government to pay Rs 10 lakh compensation to the families of
each of the deceased manhole workers on the PIL by the NGO. The Supreme Court had in its order in
October 2023 raised the compensation amount to Rs 30 lakh in case of deaths and disabilities due to
manual scavenging.
When the NGO moved the plea in April 2023, families of 26 out of 152 manhole workers who died
between 1993 and 2014, and 16 workers who died after the filing of the main petition in 2016, were not
paid compensation by the government, it claimed.
In the meanwhile, the government paid compensation to some but left out 16 which was brought to the
notice of the court on Wednesday.
Despite section 7 of the 2013 Act prohibiting local authorities or their agencies to engage people for
hazardous cleaning of sewer in underground drainage lines or septic tanks, they have continued to do
so, causing several deaths, the petitioner said. (PTI)