India

BJP says “building of corruption collapsed” after twin towers demolished

BJP

Bhupendra Chaudhary, the leader of the BJP in Uttar Pradesh, attacked the Samajwadi Party (SP) and its leader Akhilesh Yadav on Sunday after Supertech’s unlawful twin towers in Noida’s Sector 93A were dismantled.

At the time, Chaudhary criticised Yadav, his party, officials, and authorities for approving the twin towers and claimed that the building of corruption had collapsed as of today, according to news agency ANI.

He asserted that “Akhilesh Yadav and every authority at that time should account for such unlawful construction and I am confident that all of these illegal structures have taken place are protected by the then administration.”

The head of the BJP in Uttar Pradesh further said that the demolition sends a message that the government will pursue legal action against anyone who violates the law by building such unauthorized structures at the expense of citizens’ properties and income.

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We should learn from the act of demolition, he continued, calling it a constructive message.

The BJP-led state administration in UP, led by chief minister Yogi Adiyanath, is taking action against all of these illegally encroached areas, Chaudhary continued. Every person wants to create a home, according to the BJP leader, and the government and other constitutional institutions “should work on it very seriously.”

BJP

The twin buildings’ site was given to Supertech in 2004, and the Noida Authority accepted the building design for their 14-story erection in June of the same year. By 2009, the developers had changed their initial plan to incorporate a shopping center, two more buildings, and 11 floors.

The Residents’ Welfare Association (RWA) filed a petition with the Allahabad high court in 2012, saying that the twin towers had violated the UP Apartment Owners Act, 2010. Homeowners alleged that twin towers encroached on a garden-designated area depicted in the original brochure and that the buildings were built with less than a 16-meter distance between them, in violation of the law.

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In August of last year, the Supreme Court upheld the ruling of the Allahabad High Court and ordered the twin structures to be dismantled because they had been constructed illegally.

The Supertech twin towers were destroyed earlier today in just nine seconds after a nearly ten-year court battle that was primarily spearheaded by elderly people. Both unlawful buildings had a combined 3,700kg of explosives, which were set to detonate at roughly 2.33 p.m. using the “waterfall implosion” method.

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