In the face of increasing resistance to eviction from Campa Cola compound residents, the civic body here has filed a police complaint against those preventing officials from implementing the Supreme Court order even as its team has decided to try again to convince the occupants to leave the illegal flats today before opting for use of force.
According to Worli police, the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM) officials approached the cops late last evening armed with the video recording of their thwarted attempts yesterday to enter the housing complex in South Mumbai to cut off essential supplies to illegal flats.
“The MCGM approached us late last night and filed a complaint against the residents of the Society. They have also provided us with the video footage of their attempts to enter the compound, which was blocked by the residents,” an official from Worli police station told PTI.
The video recording will be examined and suitable action will be taken against the offenders, the official said.
“Once we examine the footage provided to us by the authorities, we will take further action. Today, we will be accompanying the MCGM officials to the compound to maintain law and order. We might be forced to take immediate action if the residents don’t comply with the Supreme Court orders,” the official added.
A case has been registered against the offenders under IPC Sections 353 (Assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharge of his duty), Section 341 (Punishment for wrongful restraint), Section 141 (Unlawful assembly), Section 142 (Being member of unlawful assembly), Section 143 (Punishment for unlawful assembly), Section 145 (Joining or continuing in unlawful assembly, knowing it has been commanded to disperse), Section 149 ( Every member of unlawful assembly guilty of offence committed in prosecution of common object) and various sections of the Mumbai Police Act.
Yesterday, as the deadline set by authorities for vacating the flats ended, high drama was witnessed when MCGM officials descended on the upscale housing society in Worli only to be greeted with closed gates and implacable residents blocking them with repeated chants of “we want justice”.
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