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Case over election posters in Delhi High Court

Published: 22 Nov 2013 - 06:13 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 05:56 pm

New Delhi: The city government yesterday told the Delhi High Court that the desire of the political parties to promote themselves “cannot supersede the larger public interest” as far as the need for orderly display of advertisements is concerned.

Submitting an affidavit before a division bench of Chief Justice N V Ramana and Justice Manmohan, the Delhi government stated that no city can be allowed to “become a jungle of posters” without regard to any aesthetic sense or safety.

Lakshmi Krishanan, deputy secretary in Delhi’s urban development department, filed a response on a PIL by Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) challenging the move to remove its posters from the houses of people willing to put them up.

AAP and two residents, willing to put up posters outside their homes, had asked the court that police and the Municipal Corporation of Delhi be restrained from removing posters from houses under the garb of the Delhi Prevention of Defacement of Property (DPDP) Act, 2007.

Asking the court to dismiss the plea, the Delhi government said: “No city whether it be the capital of the country or a small town can be allowed to become a jungle of posters/banners/hoarding/advertisements without regard to any aesthetic sense of safety of the drivers of vehicles or convenience of the pedestrian.” “The desire of the political parties to promote themselves can not supersede the larger public interest in the need for orderly display of advertisement materials,” the affidavit added.

Advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the party, had said that this move is denial of the right to freedom of speech of the citizen and the restriction should be set aside immediately as campaigning is going on. IANS