Banned autorickshaws still plying in suburbs

The polluting two-stroke autorickshaws banned from the streets of the metropolis by the Calcutta High Court, have quietly begun running in the suburbs after being repainted green and yellow to resemble LPG-run three-wheelers.

KOLKATA: The polluting two-stroke autorickshaws banned from the streets of the metropolis by the Calcutta High Court, have quietly begun running in the suburbs after being repainted green and yellow to resemble LPG-run three-wheelers.

West Bengal Transport minister Ranjit Kundu has admitted that illegal autorickshaws were running in the suburbs when asked about compliance of the High Court order.

On being told that several old autorickshaws repainted green and yellow to resemble LPG four-stroke ones were also running within the city, the minister said "Such three-wheelers are running in the suburbs, but not here."

The ban by the High Court on two-stroke and 15-year- old commercial vehicles from the Kolkata Metropolitan area, comprising Kolkata and parts of adjoining South and North 24 Parganas, Howrah and Hooghly districts, came into effect from August 1 this year.

After the ban, the two-stroke auto-rickshaws went off the roads, but have reappeared again. "We are trying to enforce the order, but there is a humane side to it too," Kundu said.

Stating that supply of three-wheelers by manufacturers was not adequate, he said that autorickshaw operators were poor people who also had families to maintain.
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