{"id":178443,"date":"2009-04-13T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2009-04-12T18:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/avinash-mehrotra-vs-union-of-india-ors-on-13-april-2009"},"modified":"2017-11-24T01:42:04","modified_gmt":"2017-11-23T20:12:04","slug":"avinash-mehrotra-vs-union-of-india-ors-on-13-april-2009","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/avinash-mehrotra-vs-union-of-india-ors-on-13-april-2009","title":{"rendered":"Avinash Mehrotra vs Union Of India &amp; Ors on 13 April, 2009"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"docsource_main\">Supreme Court of India<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_title\">Avinash Mehrotra vs Union Of India &amp; Ors on 13 April, 2009<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_author\">Author: D Bhandari<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_bench\">Bench: Dalveer Bhandari, Lokeshwar Singh Panta<\/div>\n<pre>                                                              REPORTABLE\n\n\n             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA\n\n                CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION\n\n          WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO.483 OF 2004\n\n\nAvinash Mehrotra                     ......    Petitioner\n\n          Versus\n\nUnion of India &amp; Others              ......    Respondents\n\n\n\n\n                       JUDGMENT\n<\/pre>\n<p>Dalveer Bhandari, J.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>1.   This important Public Interest Litigation relates to a fire<\/p>\n<p>swept through the Lord Krishna Middle School in District<\/p>\n<p>Kumbakonam in the city of Madras, Tamil Nadu.          The fire<\/p>\n<p>started in the school&#8217;s kitchen while cooks were preparing<\/p>\n<p>mid-day meal.      In order to protect the rights of life and<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                               2<\/span><\/p>\n<p>education guaranteed to all school going children under<\/p>\n<p>Articles 21 and 21-A, the petitioner has prayed this Court to<\/p>\n<p>bring about safer school conditions.\n<\/p>\n<p>2.      It is alleged that Lord Krishna Middle School is one of the<\/p>\n<p>thousands of private schools that have sprung up in response<\/p>\n<p>to drastic cuts in government spending on education. This<\/p>\n<p>building houses more than 900 students in a crowded,<\/p>\n<p>thatched-roof building with a single entrance, a narrow<\/p>\n<p>stairway, windowless classrooms and only one entrance and<\/p>\n<p>exit.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>3.      The fire had sparked by dry coconut leaves used as<\/p>\n<p>firewood in a nearby makeshift kitchen with thatched-roof.<\/p>\n<p>The fire had started when the cooks were preparing mid-day<\/p>\n<p>meal under a Mid-day meal scheme popular in Tamil Nadu. It<\/p>\n<p>is alleged that the ventilation of the entire school building was<\/p>\n<p>extremely poor with only cement-perforated windows.         It took<\/p>\n<p>sufficient time for the fire fighters on a crane to break these<\/p>\n<p>windows and rescue the few children they could with severe<\/p>\n<p>burn injuries.         The kitchen fire rose so high that the<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                            3<\/span><\/p>\n<p>thatched roof of the classrooms caught fire and the blazing<\/p>\n<p>roof supported by bamboo poles collapsed on the school<\/p>\n<p>children and most of them died on the spot.<\/p>\n<p>4.   The nearby residents started dousing the flames and<\/p>\n<p>trying to rescue children.   The school&#8217;s narrow, steep stairs<\/p>\n<p>and few exists apparently hampered those efforts. The crowd<\/p>\n<p>of volunteer rescuers ended up blocking the main door as they<\/p>\n<p>tried to help.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>5.   According to rules, a government-certified engineer is<\/p>\n<p>supposed to visit these schools once every two years and issue<\/p>\n<p>a &#8220;stability certificate&#8221; if the building is found to be in good<\/p>\n<p>condition and all safety precautions are met.     The engineer<\/p>\n<p>can refuse to issue the certificate if he finds the safety<\/p>\n<p>measures inadequate, losing the school its licence to operate.<\/p>\n<p>6.   It is mentioned in the petition that the investigations<\/p>\n<p>have revealed that the school in Kumbakonam was last<\/p>\n<p>inspected three years ago. The school had a thatched roof in<\/p>\n<p>severe violation of building laws.    It even had a thatched<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                              4<\/span><\/p>\n<p>kitchen close to the thatched classrooms.      The fire officials<\/p>\n<p>had described the school as a death trap.    They said that the<\/p>\n<p>victims had no chance of escape when the fire erupted as they<\/p>\n<p>were doing their lessons on the top floor. It is alleged that the<\/p>\n<p>incidence of Kumbakonam District is not the first of its kind.<\/p>\n<p>In the year 1995, a school prize-giving ceremony in a Northern<\/p>\n<p>Indian town turned to tragedy when a fire broke out, killing<\/p>\n<p>nearly 400 people, many of them children and teenagers. The<\/p>\n<p>fire was caused by an electrical short circuit in the town of<\/p>\n<p>Dabwali in the state of Haryana, about 150 miles from the<\/p>\n<p>National Capital.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>7.   Flagrant violation of school safety regulations continues<\/p>\n<p>in the entire country even four decades after the government<\/p>\n<p>pledged to enforce them after a private school building in<\/p>\n<p>Madurai caves in, killing 35 school girls and injuring 137.<\/p>\n<p>8.   The petitioner has prayed that he has filed this petition<\/p>\n<p>with a specific objective that:\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                             5<\/span><\/p>\n<p>(1)   each and every child of this country can receive good<\/p>\n<p>      education free from fear of safety and security,<\/p>\n<p>(2)   to ensure that more stringent rules and regulations are<\/p>\n<p>      framed keeping in mind the safety of the students,<\/p>\n<p>(3)   to ensure that such standards of safety are at par with<\/p>\n<p>      the highest standards set up anywhere in the world; and<\/p>\n<p>(4)   to ensure that such standards are in fact enforced<\/p>\n<p>      regularly for the safety and protection of children in<\/p>\n<p>      classrooms across the country.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>9.    The petitioner has submitted that the concerned building<\/p>\n<p>by-laws and rules are not followed by most of the schools in<\/p>\n<p>the country causing serious safety hazards for the children.<\/p>\n<p>10.   In this petition, it is prayed that along with the existing<\/p>\n<p>rules regarding safety, some additional rules be framed to<\/p>\n<p>strengthen the laws to protect the children in             school<\/p>\n<p>buildings in cases of fire and other kinds of emergencies. In<\/p>\n<p>the petition, the petitioner has prayed for:<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                             6<\/span><\/p>\n<p>(i)     Developing a manual with fire safety procedures, and<\/p>\n<p>        other safety precautions     and distributing   them in<\/p>\n<p>        schools. The manual can include the ways fires can be<\/p>\n<p>        prevented through careful design, management, and<\/p>\n<p>        maintenance practice; and ideas for limiting fire damage,<\/p>\n<p>        and other calamities. Marking clear and safe emergency<\/p>\n<p>        evacuations.   Making sure that all exists are marked<\/p>\n<p>        clearly and that there are no objects obstructing the<\/p>\n<p>        Entry and Exit of the school building.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    Ensuring that the kitchen in the precincts of the school<\/p>\n<p>        has adequate safety mechanisms.          Not keeping any<\/p>\n<p>        hazardous, inflammable material in the school precincts.<\/p>\n<p>        Not making school buildings with inflammable material<\/p>\n<p>        like thatched roof, or having any exposed wires in the<\/p>\n<p>        school.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   Separating hazardous areas from the main school.<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                    7<\/span><\/p>\n<p>(iv)   Ensuring that the schools are not exceeding the limit of<\/p>\n<p>       the students it can admit in accordance with the facilities<\/p>\n<p>       available for each school, ensuring proper facilities like<\/p>\n<p>       safe drinking water, toilets, first aid boxes, proper<\/p>\n<p>       ventilation, lighting etc is available to the students and<\/p>\n<p>       the teachers.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(v)    Schools must take appropriate safety measures and an<\/p>\n<p>       emergency       response    plan      that    delineates    staff<\/p>\n<p>       responsibilities, communication modes, and training and<\/p>\n<p>       updating procedures for all members of the faculty, staff<\/p>\n<p>       and students.    Assigning duties to teachers in case of an<\/p>\n<p>       emergency like fire, earthquake, flood, a mob attack etc<\/p>\n<p>       and   training    the   staff   to   ensure   that   all   safety<\/p>\n<p>       precautions are followed.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(vi)   Fire insurance coverage should be made mandatory for<\/p>\n<p>       all schools.      This will also help as all insurance<\/p>\n<p>       companies will definitely inspect the school premises<\/p>\n<p>       before agreeing to provide insurance cover, thereby<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                 8<\/span><\/p>\n<p>       ensuring adherence to the highest safety standards by<\/p>\n<p>       the schools.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(vii) Residential schools to have proper safety measures in<\/p>\n<p>       case of using boilers, kitchen, ensuring that there is no<\/p>\n<p>       leakage while using or storing fuel, and that it is outside<\/p>\n<p>       the reach of children.   All school buildings must install<\/p>\n<p>       fire extinguishing equipment and sensor alarms in case<\/p>\n<p>       of fires.   Such alarms must be able to automatically<\/p>\n<p>       intimate the nearest local fire station so that their<\/p>\n<p>       response times are much quicker in case of fire.<\/p>\n<p>(viii) Regular fire drills to make students aware of what to do<\/p>\n<p>       in case of a fire emergency.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(ix)   The States should deal with all aspects of safety within<\/p>\n<p>       schools pertaining to classrooms, kitchen, laboratories,<\/p>\n<p>       and    libraries   and   outside   schools     relating       to<\/p>\n<p>       playgrounds, swimming pools and field trips.<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                9<\/span><\/p>\n<p>(x)    There should be a policy prescribing safety audits in all<\/p>\n<p>       schools vide which an assessment of the extent to which<\/p>\n<p>       the   stipulated   safety   procedures   for   a   particular<\/p>\n<p>       area\/task are followed can be done. Audits can be used<\/p>\n<p>       to identify weaknesses in safety norms and check<\/p>\n<p>       compliance with set standards and reinforce positive safe<\/p>\n<p>       behaviour.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(xi)   The local authorities in both urban and rural areas<\/p>\n<p>       should be given specific directions with regard to the<\/p>\n<p>       safety measures by the respective State Government.<\/p>\n<p>11.    In the petition, it is averred that the State is duty bound<\/p>\n<p>to protect and secure lives of students across the country by<\/p>\n<p>ensuring the minimum safety standards. The State is liable to<\/p>\n<p>promulgate policies, which ensure the implementation of the<\/p>\n<p>safety laws and procedures laid down.            The State must<\/p>\n<p>ensure that the government-certified engineer visits each and<\/p>\n<p>every school at least once in two years and issued a `stability<\/p>\n<p>certificate&#8217;. if the building is found to be in good condition and<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                            10<\/span><\/p>\n<p>all safety precautions are met.        There should be strict<\/p>\n<p>supervision on those engineers who can issue these kinds of<\/p>\n<p>certificates.   It is alleged that most of the Indian private<\/p>\n<p>schools in district towns are dull, claustrophobic, cramped<\/p>\n<p>and often have derelict structures with no fire safety systems,<\/p>\n<p>playgrounds or libraries. Most of these private schools in the<\/p>\n<p>district towns are located in a warren of congested lanes and<\/p>\n<p>school authorities often lock the gates when classes are on to<\/p>\n<p>keep children from slipping out of the school.     Most of the<\/p>\n<p>schools in the villages and small towns are still made of<\/p>\n<p>thatched roofs made from coconut leaves or other cheap and<\/p>\n<p>easily available materials to avoid the cost of construction in<\/p>\n<p>flagrant violation of the building laws.<\/p>\n<p>12.   It is prayed in the petition that a committee of jurists,<\/p>\n<p>legal experts and lawyers be constituted to formulate a<\/p>\n<p>comprehensive report in a time bound plan for carrying out<\/p>\n<p>reforms in the safety standards as prescribed in the schools<\/p>\n<p>and to direct all the schools to implement the plan, alternately<\/p>\n<p>to come forward with their own plan for providing safety<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                 11<\/span><\/p>\n<p>measures in the schools.       It is further prayed that this Court<\/p>\n<p>should evolve model safety standards as a part of Article 21<\/p>\n<p>and for free and fair exercise of fundamental rights under<\/p>\n<p>Articles 14, 15 and 19 of the Constitution of India.<\/p>\n<p>13.    In this petition, we are called upon to determine what, if<\/p>\n<p>any, safety standards schools should have and how, if at all,<\/p>\n<p>schools have not met those standards.\n<\/p>\n<p>14.    The National Building Code of India, 2005, promulgated<\/p>\n<p>by the     Bureau    of Indian    Standards,     provides   detailed<\/p>\n<p>instructions on how to construct fire-safe buildings.        Tables<\/p>\n<p>and drawings set standard for schools particularly, including<\/p>\n<p>number and type of fire extinguishers, quantity of water<\/p>\n<p>necessary for a proper fire suppression system, and many<\/p>\n<p>more, providing an engineer-tested, nationally applicable set<\/p>\n<p>of    standards   that   our   schools   could   follow.    In   the<\/p>\n<p>introductory materials for the Code, the Bureau of Indian<\/p>\n<p>Standards affirms the petitioner&#8217;s claim in this case:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>            &#8220;The hazards of fire in educational buildings<br \/>\n       can be considerably lowered by adoption of certain<br \/>\n       predetermined fire safety measures with regard to<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                              12<\/span><\/p>\n<p>       proper planning of buildings, choice of proper<br \/>\n       materials and components, electrical equipments<br \/>\n       and making suitable provisions for fire detection<br \/>\n       and suppression system.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>15.    This Court issued notice to the Union of India, State<\/p>\n<p>Governments and the Union Territories. Replies and counter<\/p>\n<p>affidavits have been received from almost all the State<\/p>\n<p>Governments and the Union Territories and also the Union of<\/p>\n<p>India.    This Court appointed Mr. Colin Gonsalves, learned<\/p>\n<p>Senior Advocate as Amicus Curiae.           He also suggested some<\/p>\n<p>guidelines which need to be followed by all schools in the<\/p>\n<p>country.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>16.      27 States and Territories have filed affidavits in this<\/p>\n<p>Court detailing the current safety of their schools and plans<\/p>\n<p>for improvement.        The States admit that many schools do<\/p>\n<p>not meet self-determined safety standards, let alone the more<\/p>\n<p>rigorous standards of the National Building Code.             The<\/p>\n<p>affidavits generally focus on plans for improvement, rather<\/p>\n<p>than     schools&#8217;   current   conditions,    because   much   work<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                 13<\/span><\/p>\n<p>remain.     Where States have provided detailed counts of<\/p>\n<p>schools   and   installed   safety   features,   it   emerges    that<\/p>\n<p>thousands of schools lack any fire suppression equipment.<\/p>\n<p>Thousands more schools do not have adequate emergency<\/p>\n<p>egress or non-inflammable roofs. Unfortunately, most States<\/p>\n<p>failed to provide any quantitative data in their affidavits.<\/p>\n<p>Instead these States filed vague plans for future renovations<\/p>\n<p>and piecemeal schemes to improve schools safety.                Little<\/p>\n<p>technical advice informs some of the plans, and few have any<\/p>\n<p>admitted force of law or fail-safe or follow-up mechanism from<\/p>\n<p>the State Government.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>17.   While we applaud States&#8217; efforts to improve schools, we<\/p>\n<p>find that States have done too little, too late.          With the<\/p>\n<p>guidance of the National Building Code and affidavits in this<\/p>\n<p>case, we view Mr. Gonsalves&#8217;s brief as crystallizing a minimum<\/p>\n<p>set of safety standards for schools. By their own admission,<\/p>\n<p>States have not met these standards and they have welcomed<\/p>\n<p>this Court&#8217;s guidance in achieving improvement.            We will<\/p>\n<p>consider in more detail the exact standards required and relief<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                           14<\/span><\/p>\n<p>sought later in this view.   It is clearly borne out from the<\/p>\n<p>affidavits filed by the respondents that even the basic fire<\/p>\n<p>extinguishing equipments have not been installed in most of<\/p>\n<p>the schools.   Majority of the schools do not have emergency<\/p>\n<p>exits. The schools must realize and properly comprehend the<\/p>\n<p>importance of the fire safety equipments, but unfortunately<\/p>\n<p>most of the schools do not have fire extinguishing equipments<\/p>\n<p>and consequently, the schools are not following the minimum<\/p>\n<p>safety standards prescribed by the Building Code, the Bureau<\/p>\n<p>of Indian Standards.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>18.   Despite best intentions and frequent agreements, these<\/p>\n<p>codes and safety standards rarely bind builders in law or<\/p>\n<p>practice.   State or local governments must enact Building<\/p>\n<p>Codes before any may have the force of law. Some Building<\/p>\n<p>Codes exist in law, but few states or municipalities have<\/p>\n<p>enacted a standard as rigorous as the National Building Code.<\/p>\n<p>Weak enforcement often then moots the enacted code&#8217;s<\/p>\n<p>effectiveness, no matter the Code&#8217;s intent, whether fire safety<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                             15<\/span><\/p>\n<p>officials, routinely speak to the need for meaningful standards<\/p>\n<p>with real enforcement.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>19.   In the petition, the petitioner does not seek damages or<\/p>\n<p>court&#8217;s finding on culpability. The main intention of filing this<\/p>\n<p>petition is to protect against similar future tragedies by<\/p>\n<p>improving the conditions of the schools in our country.<\/p>\n<p>20.   Education   occupies    an   important    place   in   our<\/p>\n<p>Constitution and culture. There has been emphasis on free<\/p>\n<p>and compulsory education for children in this country for a<\/p>\n<p>long time. There is a very strong historical perspective.    The<\/p>\n<p>Hunter Commission in 1882-83, almost 125 years ago,<\/p>\n<p>recommended Universal Education in India. It proposed to<\/p>\n<p>make education compulsory for the children.<\/p>\n<p>21.   The Government of India Act, 1935 provided that<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;education should be made free and compulsory for both boys<\/p>\n<p>and girls.&#8221;   While debating in a bill in Imperial Legislation<\/p>\n<p>Council in 1911, Shri Gopal Krishna Gokhale strongly<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                16<\/span><\/p>\n<p>advocated    that   elementary     education    should    be    both<\/p>\n<p>compulsory and free.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>22.   Our original Framers of the Constitution placed free and<\/p>\n<p>compulsory education in the Directive Principles.         The un-<\/p>\n<p>amended Article 45 provided that:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>            &#8220;The State shall endeavour to provide, within a<br \/>\n      period of ten years from the commencement of this<br \/>\n      Constitution, for free and compulsory education for<br \/>\n      all children until they complete the age of fourteen<br \/>\n      years.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>23.   The Kothari Commission on Education set up by the<\/p>\n<p>Government of India in 1966 strongly recommended free and<\/p>\n<p>compulsory education for children up to 14 years.               The<\/p>\n<p>Commission observed that there is no other way for the poor<\/p>\n<p>to climb their way out of this predicament.<\/p>\n<p>24.   Education     occupies   a    sacred     place   within   our<\/p>\n<p>Constitution and culture.      Article 21A of the Constitution,<\/p>\n<p>adopted in 2002, codified this Court&#8217;s holding in Unni<\/p>\n<p>Krishnan, J.P. &amp; Others v. State of Andhra Pradesh &amp;<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                             17<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Ors. (1993) 1 SCC 645, in which we established a right to<\/p>\n<p>education.   Parliament did not merely affirm that right; the<\/p>\n<p>Amending Act placed the right to education within the<\/p>\n<p>Constitution&#8217;s set of Fundamental Rights, the most cherished<\/p>\n<p>principles of our society.   As the Court observed in Unni<\/p>\n<p>Krishnan (supra), para 8:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;The immortal Poet Valluvar whose Tirukkural will<br \/>\n      surpass all ages and transcend all religious said of<br \/>\n      education:\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;Learning is excellence of wealth that none destroy;<br \/>\n      To man nought else affords reality of joy.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>25.   Education today remains liberation &#8211; a tool for the<\/p>\n<p>betterment of our civil institutions, the protection of our civil<\/p>\n<p>liberties, and the path to an informed and questioning<\/p>\n<p>citizenry.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>26.   Then as now, we recognize education&#8217;s &#8220;transcendental<\/p>\n<p>importance&#8221; in the lives of individuals and in the very survival<\/p>\n<p>of our Constitution and Republic.       In the years since the<\/p>\n<p>inclusion of Article 21A, we have clarified that the right to<\/p>\n<p>education attaches to the individual as an inalienable human<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                             18<\/span><\/p>\n<p>right. We have traced the broad scope of this right in <a href=\"\/doc\/1113296\/\">R. D.<\/p>\n<p>Upadhyay v. State of A.P. &amp; Ors. AIR<\/a> 2006 SC 1946,<\/p>\n<p>holding that the State must provide education to all children<\/p>\n<p>in all places, even in prisons, to the children of prisoners. We<\/p>\n<p>have also affirmed the inviolability of the right to education.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/1382544\/\">In Election Commission of India v. St. Mary&#8217;s School &amp;<\/p>\n<p>Ors.<\/a> (2008) 2 SCC 390, we refused to allow the State to take<\/p>\n<p>teachers from the classroom to work in polling places. While<\/p>\n<p>the democratic State has a mandate to conduct elections, the<\/p>\n<p>mundane demands of instruction superseded the State&#8217;s need<\/p>\n<p>to staff polling places. Indeed, the democratic State may never<\/p>\n<p>reach its greatest potential without a citizenry sufficiently<\/p>\n<p>educated   to understand        civil rights   and social duties,<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/595099\/\">Bandhua Mukti Morcha v. Union of India &amp; Ors.,<\/a> (1997)<\/p>\n<p>10 SCC 549. These conclusions all follow from our opinion in<\/p>\n<p>Unni Krishnan. Education remains essential to the life of the<\/p>\n<p>individual, as much as health and dignity, and the State must<\/p>\n<p>provide it, comprehensively and completely, in order to satisfy<\/p>\n<p>its highest duty to citizens.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                19<\/span><\/p>\n<p>27.   Unlike other fundamental rights, the right to education<\/p>\n<p>places a burden not only on the State, but also on the parent<\/p>\n<p>or guardian of every child, and on the child herself. Article<\/p>\n<p>21A, which reads as follows, places one obligation primarily<\/p>\n<p>on the State:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;The State shall provide free and compulsory<br \/>\n      education to all children of the age of six to fourteen<br \/>\n      years in such manner as the State may, by law,<br \/>\n      determine.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>28.   By contrast, Article 51A(k), which reads as follows,<\/p>\n<p>places burden squarely on the parents:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;Fundamental duties &#8211; it shall be the duty of every<br \/>\n      citizen of India who is the parent or guardian to<br \/>\n      provide opportunities for education to his child or,<br \/>\n      as the case may be, ward between the age of six and<br \/>\n      fourteen years.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>29.   The Constitution directs both burdens to achieve one<\/p>\n<p>end: the compulsory education of children, free from the<\/p>\n<p>fetters of cost, parental obstruction, or State inaction.       The<\/p>\n<p>two articles also balance the relative burdens on parents and<\/p>\n<p>the State. Parents sacrifice for the education of their children,<\/p>\n<p>by sending them to school for hours of the day, but only with<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                20<\/span><\/p>\n<p>a commensurate sacrifice of the State&#8217;s resources. The right<\/p>\n<p>to education, then, is more than a human or fundamental<\/p>\n<p>right. It is a reciprocal agreement between the State and the<\/p>\n<p>family, and it places an affirmative burden on all participants<\/p>\n<p>in our civil society.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>30.   This Court has routinely held that another fundamental<\/p>\n<p>right to life encompasses more than a breath and a heartbeat.<\/p>\n<p>In reflecting on the meaning of &#8220;personal liberty&#8221; in Articles 19<\/p>\n<p>and 21, we have held that &#8220;that `personal liberty&#8217; is used in<\/p>\n<p>the article as a compendious term to include within itself all<\/p>\n<p>the varieties of rights which go to makeup the `personal<\/p>\n<p>liberties&#8217; of man.&#8221; <a href=\"\/doc\/619152\/\">Kharak Singh v. State of U.P. &amp; Ors. AIR<\/a><\/p>\n<p>1963 SC 1295, para 16.            Similarly, we must hold that<\/p>\n<p>educating a child requires more than a teacher and a<\/p>\n<p>blackboard, or a classroom and a book.              The right to<\/p>\n<p>education requires that a child study in a quality school, and<\/p>\n<p>a quality school certainly should pose no threat to a child&#8217;s<\/p>\n<p>safety.       We    reached   a    similar   conclusion,   on   the<\/p>\n<p>comprehensive guarantees implicit in the right to education,<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                            21<\/span><\/p>\n<p>only recently in our opinion in <a href=\"\/doc\/1299440\/\">Ashoka Kumar Thakur v.<\/p>\n<p>Union of India &amp; Ors.<\/a> (2008) 6 SCC 1.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>31.     The Constitution likewise provides meaning to the word<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;education&#8221; beyond its dictionary meaning.      Parents should<\/p>\n<p>not be compelled to send their children to dangerous schools,<\/p>\n<p>nor should children suffer compulsory education in unsound<\/p>\n<p>buildings. Likewise, the State&#8217;s reciprocal duty to parents<\/p>\n<p>begins with the provision of a free education, and it extends to<\/p>\n<p>the State&#8217;s regulatory power. No matter where a family seeks<\/p>\n<p>to educate its children, the State must ensure that children<\/p>\n<p>suffer no harm in exercising their fundamental right and civic<\/p>\n<p>duty.    States thus bear the additional burden of regulation,<\/p>\n<p>ensuring that schools provide safe facilities as part of a<\/p>\n<p>compulsory education.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>32.     In the instant case, we have no need to sketch all the<\/p>\n<p>contours of the Constitution&#8217;s guarantees, so we do not. We<\/p>\n<p>merely hold that the right to education incorporates the<\/p>\n<p>provision of safe schools.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                              22<\/span><\/p>\n<p>33.   This Court in Ashoka Kumar Thakur&#8217;s case (supra)<\/p>\n<p>observed as under:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;It has become necessary that the Government set a<br \/>\n      realistic target within which it must fully implement<br \/>\n      Article 21A regarding free and compulsory<br \/>\n      education for the entire country. The Government<br \/>\n      should suitably revise budget allocations for<br \/>\n      education. The priorities have to be set correctly.<br \/>\n      The most important fundamental right may be<br \/>\n      Article 21A, which, in the larger interest of the<br \/>\n      nation, must be fully implemented. Without Article<br \/>\n      21A, the other fundamental rights are effectively<br \/>\n      rendered meaningless.       Education stands above<br \/>\n      other rights, as one&#8217;s ability to enforce one&#8217;s<br \/>\n      fundamental rights flows from one&#8217;s education.<br \/>\n      This is ultimately why the judiciary must oversee<br \/>\n      Government spending on free and compulsory<br \/>\n      education.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>34.   In view of the importance of Article 21A, it is imperative<\/p>\n<p>that the education which is provided to children in the<\/p>\n<p>primary schools should be in the environment of safety.<\/p>\n<p>35.   In view of what has happened in Lord Krishna Middle<\/p>\n<p>School in District Kumbakonam and other incidents which<\/p>\n<p>have been enumerated in the preceding paragraphs, it has<\/p>\n<p>become imperative that each school must follow the bare<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                           23<\/span><\/p>\n<p>minimum safety standards, in addition to the compliance of<\/p>\n<p>the National Building Code of India, 2005, in particular Part<\/p>\n<p>IV &#8211; Fire &amp; Life Safety and the Code of Practice of Fire Safety<\/p>\n<p>in Educational Institutions (IS 14435:1997) of the Bureau of<\/p>\n<p>Indian Standards. The said safety standards are enumerated<\/p>\n<p>hereinbelow:\n<\/p>\n<p>3.1 FIRE SAFETY MEASURES IN SCHOOLS:\n<\/p>\n<p>  i.      Provision of adequate capacity and numbers of fire<\/p>\n<p>          extinguishers of ISI marks to be provided in eye-<\/p>\n<p>          catching spots in each block of the school.<\/p>\n<p>  ii.     First Aid kits and necessary medicines should be<\/p>\n<p>          readily available in the school.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n  iii.    Provision of water tank and separate piping from<\/p>\n<p>          the tank with hose reel to the ground floor and first<\/p>\n<p>          floor.\n<\/p>\n<p>  iv.     Fire fighting training to all teachers and students<\/p>\n<p>          from X to XII standards.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                 24<\/span><\/p>\n<p>v.      Fire Task Force in every school comprising of Head<\/p>\n<p>        of the institution, two teachers \/ staff members and<\/p>\n<p>        one member from the Fire and Rescue Department<\/p>\n<p>        should     be   constituted.   The   Fire     &amp;    Rescue<\/p>\n<p>        Department member shall monitor and make fire<\/p>\n<p>        safety plan and conduct inspections once in every<\/p>\n<p>        three months.\n<\/p>\n<p>vi.     Display of emergency telephone numbers and list of<\/p>\n<p>        persons to be contacted on the notice board and<\/p>\n<p>        other prominent places.\n<\/p>\n<p>vii.    Mock drills to be conducted regularly. Fire alarm to<\/p>\n<p>        be provided in each floor and for rural schools<\/p>\n<p>        separate    long    bell   arrangement   in       case    of<\/p>\n<p>        emergency.\n<\/p>\n<p>viii.   All old electrical wiring and equipment shall be<\/p>\n<p>        replaced with ISI mark equipments and routine<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                       25<\/span><\/p>\n<p>       maintenance conducted by the School Management<\/p>\n<p>       in   consultation   with   the   Fire   and   Rescue<\/p>\n<p>       Department.\n<\/p>\n<p> ix.   No High Tension lines should run inside or in close<\/p>\n<p>       proximity to the school.    Steps must be taken to<\/p>\n<p>       shift them if they are already there.\n<\/p>\n<p> x.    The Fire and Rescue Department shall frame<\/p>\n<p>       guidelines with &#8220;DOS and DON&#8217;Ts&#8217; for schools and<\/p>\n<p>       issue a fitness certificate, which shall be renewed<\/p>\n<p>       periodically.\n<\/p>\n<p>3.2 TRAINING OF SCHOOL TEACHERS &amp; OTHER STAFF:<\/p>\n<p> i.    The teachers along with other staff shall be trained<\/p>\n<p>       to handle safety equipment, initiate emergency<\/p>\n<p>       evacuations and protect their students in the event<\/p>\n<p>       of fire and other emergencies by the Fire and<\/p>\n<p>       Rescue Department.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                           26<\/span><\/p>\n<p>       ii.            They shall also be trained in providing emergency<\/p>\n<p>                      first-aid treatment.\n<\/p>\n<p>iii.                  There shall be a School Safety Advisory Committee<\/p>\n<p>             and an Emergency Response Plan drafted by the<\/p>\n<p>             Committee        in   approval   and    consultation   with   the<\/p>\n<p>             concerned Fire &amp; Rescue Department.\n<\/p>\n<p>iv.                   Emergency Response Drills conducted at regular<\/p>\n<p>             intervals to train the students as well as the school staff.<\/p>\n<p>v.                    All schools to observe Fire Safety Day on 14th of<\/p>\n<p>             April every year with awareness programs and fire safety<\/p>\n<p>             drills     in   collaboration    with   the   Fire   and   Rescue<\/p>\n<p>             Department.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                              27<\/span><\/p>\n<p>3.3 SCHOOL BUILDING SPECIFICATIONS:\n<\/p>\n<p>  i.     The school buildings shall preferably be a `A&#8217; Class<\/p>\n<p>         construction with brick \/ stone masonry walls with<\/p>\n<p>         RCC roofing.    Where it is not possible to provide<\/p>\n<p>         RCC roofing only non-combustible fireproof heat<\/p>\n<p>         resistance materials should be used.\n<\/p>\n<p>  ii.    The nursery and elementary schools should be<\/p>\n<p>         housed    in   single   storied   buildings   and    the<\/p>\n<p>         maximum number of floors in school buildings shall<\/p>\n<p>         be restricted to three including the ground floor.<\/p>\n<p>  iii.   The School building shall be free from inflammable<\/p>\n<p>         and toxic materials, which if necessary, should be<\/p>\n<p>         stored away from the school building.\n<\/p>\n<p>  iv.    The staircases, which act as exits or escape routes,<\/p>\n<p>         shall adhere to provisions specified in the National<\/p>\n<p>         Building Code of India 2005 to ensure quick<\/p>\n<p>         evacuation of children.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                        28<\/span><\/p>\n<p>v.      The orientation of the buildings shall be in such a<\/p>\n<p>        way that proper air circulation and lighting is<\/p>\n<p>        available with open space all round the building as<\/p>\n<p>        far as possible.\n<\/p>\n<p>vi.     Existing school buildings shall be provided with<\/p>\n<p>        additional doors in the main entrances as well as<\/p>\n<p>        the class rooms if required.   The size of the main<\/p>\n<p>        exit and classroom doors shall be enlarged if found<\/p>\n<p>        inadequate.\n<\/p>\n<p>vii.    School buildings have to be insured against fire and<\/p>\n<p>        natural calamities with Group Insurance of school<\/p>\n<p>        pupils.\n<\/p>\n<p>viii.   Kitchen and other activities involving use of fire<\/p>\n<p>        shall be carried out in a secure and safe location<\/p>\n<p>        away from the main school building.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                 29<\/span><\/p>\n<p>  ix.   All schools shall have water storage tanks.<\/p>\n<p>3.4 CLEARANCES &amp; CERTIFICATES:\n<\/p>\n<p>  i.    Every School shall have a mandatory fire safety<\/p>\n<p>        inspection     by   the   Fire   and    Rescue       Services<\/p>\n<p>        Department followed by issuance of a `no objection<\/p>\n<p>        certificate&#8217;   to   the   School       as     a   mandatory<\/p>\n<p>        requirement for granting permission for establishing<\/p>\n<p>        or continuation of a School.\n<\/p>\n<p>  i.    An Inspection Team consisting of experts like a Civil<\/p>\n<p>        Engineer, a Health Officer, a Revenue Officer, a<\/p>\n<p>        Psychologist, a Fire Officer, a local body officer and<\/p>\n<p>        a development       officer   besides       the   educational<\/p>\n<p>        authorities shall carry inspection and assessment of<\/p>\n<p>        infrastructural facilities before the commencement<\/p>\n<p>        of each academic year. The Team shall submit its<\/p>\n<p>        Inspection Report to the concerned district Chief<\/p>\n<p>        Educational Officer.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                             30<\/span><\/p>\n<p>iii.     The building plans for schools shall be prepared<\/p>\n<p>       only by a Government certified engineer and the PWD<\/p>\n<p>       Executive Engineer concerned should inspect the<\/p>\n<p>       building and award a structural stability certificate.<\/p>\n<p>       Stability Certificates shall be issued by the State or<\/p>\n<p>       Central Government Engineers only and shall be<\/p>\n<p>       mandatory for granting permission for establishing or<\/p>\n<p>       continuation of a School.\n<\/p>\n<p>iv.      In every district, one Recognition Committee headed<\/p>\n<p>       by a retired judge shall be constituted. Officials from<\/p>\n<p>       Revenue Department, Public Works Department, Fire<\/p>\n<p>       Service, Electricity Board, Health and Education<\/p>\n<p>       Department, a reputed NGO shall be members. They<\/p>\n<p>       shall visit the schools periodically or at least the erring<\/p>\n<p>       institutions as listed by the Chief Education Officer.<\/p>\n<p>v.       Conditional recognition \/ approval shall never by<\/p>\n<p>       resorted to for any school.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                              31<\/span><\/p>\n<p>36.     In this petition, we need not take any action contrary to<\/p>\n<p>government policy to fulfill the Constitution&#8217;s mandate. Union<\/p>\n<p>and State officials have already filed wide-ranging plans to<\/p>\n<p>improve school safety. Along with the National Building Code,<\/p>\n<p>a combination of the better parts of these plans would bring<\/p>\n<p>the nation&#8217;s schools to an adequate level of safety.        States<\/p>\n<p>have also expressed enthusiasm for reform and some have<\/p>\n<p>asked this Court expressly for direction.<\/p>\n<p>37.     Many States have already begun implementation.        The<\/p>\n<p>most forward thinking States have enacted and enforced the<\/p>\n<p>National Building Code in their schools. Often these States<\/p>\n<p>have also created, empowered and funded a state-wide<\/p>\n<p>emergency response office. The coordinated efforts and<\/p>\n<p>concentration of knowledge in these administrative units<\/p>\n<p>make States better able to prepare for emergencies, as much<\/p>\n<p>as to respond once the problem has started. For example, the<\/p>\n<p>State     of   Gujarat   has   established   such   an   emergency<\/p>\n<p>management office. Having already settled building codes and<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                          32<\/span><\/p>\n<p>other large issues, the State can focus on other aspects of<\/p>\n<p>emergency management.        With the assistance of outside<\/p>\n<p>experts, Gujarat recently created a colouring book to teach<\/p>\n<p>children how to respond to emergencies. On a smaller scale,<\/p>\n<p>but no less vital, in the Union Territory of Pondicherry,<\/p>\n<p>administrators replaced all thatched roofs and allocated an<\/p>\n<p>additional Rs.500 lakhs to build pucca classrooms.      Some<\/p>\n<p>States have counted their schools and know which require<\/p>\n<p>repairs; they provided these details in their affidavits along<\/p>\n<p>with detailed plans for improvement. We are encouraged by<\/p>\n<p>the agreement shared among States that safety must improve.<\/p>\n<p>Our order should provide additional stimulus for the general<\/p>\n<p>aims of the States&#8217; already agreed policy.<\/p>\n<p>38.   In the end, we should need to do little but enforce<\/p>\n<p>existing laws and encourage States in their own well-<\/p>\n<p>intentioned safety programmes. However, in the years since<\/p>\n<p>the fire at the Lord Krishna Middle School, some States have<\/p>\n<p>moved slowly and safety standards have varied in quality<\/p>\n<p>across States.   These delays and variations have subjected<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                           33<\/span><\/p>\n<p>millions more school children to danger from fire, earthquakes<\/p>\n<p>and other causes, when simple enhancements could offer<\/p>\n<p>much greater protection.       Articles 21 and 21-A of the<\/p>\n<p>Constitution require that India&#8217;s school children receive<\/p>\n<p>education in safe schools.     In order to give effect to the<\/p>\n<p>provisions of the Constitution, we must ensure that India&#8217;s<\/p>\n<p>schools adhere to basic safety standards without further<\/p>\n<p>delay.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>39.   It is the fundamental right of each and every child to<\/p>\n<p>receive education free from fear of security and safety.   The<\/p>\n<p>children cannot be compelled to receive education from an<\/p>\n<p>unsound and unsafe building.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>40.   In view of what happened in Lord Krishna Middle School<\/p>\n<p>in District Kumbakonam where 93 children were burnt alive<\/p>\n<p>and several similar incidences had happened in the past,<\/p>\n<p>therefore, it has become imperative to direct that safety<\/p>\n<p>measures as prescribed by the National Building Code of<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                        34<\/span><\/p>\n<p>India, 2005 be implemented by all government and private<\/p>\n<p>schools functioning in our country.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>        We direct that:-\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(i)     Before   granting     recognition    or    affiliation,   the<\/p>\n<p>        concerned State Governments and Union Territories<\/p>\n<p>        are directed to ensure that the buildings are safe<\/p>\n<p>        and   secured      from   every    angle   and    they    are<\/p>\n<p>        constructed      according    to    the    safety    norms<\/p>\n<p>        incorporated in the National Building Code of India.<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    All existing government and private schools shall<\/p>\n<p>        install fire extinguishing equipments within a period<\/p>\n<p>        of six months.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   The school buildings be kept free from inflammable<\/p>\n<p>        and toxic material.       If storage is inevitable, they<\/p>\n<p>        should be stored safely.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                       35<\/span><\/p>\n<p>(iv)   Evaluation of structural aspect of the school may be<\/p>\n<p>       carried out periodically.           We direct that the<\/p>\n<p>       concerned engineers and officials must strictly<\/p>\n<p>       follow the National Building Code.              The safety<\/p>\n<p>       certificate be issued only after proper inspection.<\/p>\n<p>       Dereliction    in   duty     must     attract     immediate<\/p>\n<p>       disciplinary action against the concerned officials.<\/p>\n<p>(v)    Necessary training be imparted to the staff and<\/p>\n<p>       other   officials   of the   school    to   use    the   fire<\/p>\n<p>       extinguishing equipments.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>41.    The Education Secretaries of each State and Union<\/p>\n<p>Territories are directed to file an affidavit of compliance of this<\/p>\n<p>order within one month after installation of fire extinguishing<\/p>\n<p>equipments.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>42.    List this petition on 07.12.2009 to ensure compliance of<\/p>\n<p>this order.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                  36<\/span><\/p>\n<p>                  &#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;..J.<br \/>\n                  (Dalveer Bhandari)<\/p>\n<p>                   &#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.J.<br \/>\n                   (Lokeshwar Singh Panta)<br \/>\nNew Delhi;\n<\/p>\n<p>April 13, 2009.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Supreme Court of India Avinash Mehrotra vs Union Of India &amp; Ors on 13 April, 2009 Author: D Bhandari Bench: Dalveer Bhandari, Lokeshwar Singh Panta REPORTABLE IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO.483 OF 2004 Avinash Mehrotra &#8230;&#8230; Petitioner Versus Union of India &amp; Others &#8230;&#8230; Respondents JUDGMENT Dalveer [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[30],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-178443","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-supreme-court-of-india"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Avinash Mehrotra vs Union Of India &amp; 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