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No mining in Aravallis till Aug 7, NGT tells Haryana

Protected forest area being dug up
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The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has issued a show-cause notice to the Haryana Government and the Union Ministry of Environment for allegedly allowing mining on 'protected' forest area in the Aravallis.

The tribunal also directed the state government to ensure no mining or stone crushing-related activity was carried out in the area till August 7.

An NGT bench headed by chairperson Justice Prakash Shrivastava issued the notice on a plea filed by residents of Rajawas, a village located in the Aravallis in Mahendergarh district. The bench has asked the petitioners to explain within four weeks how 25 per cent of the protected forest land was auctioned to stone crushing units.

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The petitioners had claimed that the Haryana Government had auctioned one-fourth of the 506.33 acres of the protected forestland for mining and stone crushing activities thereby endangering the fragile ecosystem of the area. The 506.33-acre patch of the land at Rajawas village was notified as a protected forest as a part of afforestation measures being undertaken in compensation for diversion of forestland for non-forest purposes in the Great Nicobar Island.

“We are very relieved that in the hearing on 4th April 2025, the Honourable Bench of the National Green Tribunal accepted the Intervention . It is critical for the villagers to be a party to the ongoing suo-moto case for proposed mining in our village as it is our health, quality of life and farming that will be negatively impacted. Our main prayer in the legal petition is that the ‘Protected Forest’ area in Rajawas village should not be exposed to any environmentally destructive activities like mining and stone crushing," said Satyanarayan, Nambardar of Rajawas village who is also one of the applicants.  The petitioners also highlighted the impact of the activities on the depleting water table in addition to the flora and fauna of the area.

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Environmentalists have also held the Union Government accountable saying that the land patch was part of a central inter-state compensatory afforestation project.

“Not just Haryana but even the Centre is responsible. The land is part of compensatory afforestation measures being undertaken in lieu of diversion of forest land for non-forest purposes in the Great Nicobar Island. On one hand, the country is losing dense evergreen forests in the Nicobar Island, on the other, the 'Nicobar swap' which is supposed to revive the Aravallis is being sabotaged,” said Neelam Ahluwalia, founder-member, People for Aravallis, a group of citizens working to conserve the Aravallis.

On June 20, 2023, the Haryana Government had issued a notification designating 506 acres of Aravallis in Rajawas as ‘protected’ under the Forest (Conservation) Act. However, on the same day, the Mining Department auctioned one-quarter of the land.

A company was chosen and awarded a 10-year lease on August 4 to quarry stones up to 1.4 metric tonnes per annum and deploy three stone crushers there. The department claimed while auctioning the site it had no idea it was designated as a protected forest.

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