Taking note of the submission, a bench comprising Chief Justice T S Thakur and Justice U U Lalit disposed of the PIL, filed by Delhi Jal Board, that had sought a direction for ensuring uninterrupted supply of water which was hit owing to violent Jat quota stir in Haryana.
The counsel for Haryana said that though Munak Regulator and barrages at Khubru and Mandora village in the state had been hit by the violence, but engineers and others are working to to get back to the earlier situation so that the water supply becomes normal.
The bench rejected the submission of Haryana that Delhi government be asked to contribute in the repair work.
"Why should Delhi pay for it. Your people damaged them then you tell, who will pay for them?," the bench, which later asked both governments to co-operarate and resolve, said during the hearing.
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The bench, while disposing of DJB's PIL, said that it was not an "adversarial" litigation and asked Haryana government to take efforts to ensure resumption of normal and usual supply of water to Delhi.
Earlier, the apex court had sought the status report from
Haryana on the plea of Delhi that the water supply be resumed.
The bench, which was initially reluctant to take up the plea of Delhi, had rapped AAP-led Delhi government for moving approaching the apex court instead of resolving the issue at government-to-government level.
"You ministers are sitting in the court instead of going to the field. You rest in AC chambers and you want order from the court," the bench had said while referring to the presence of Delhi Water Minister Kapil Mishra inside the court.
However, after repeated persistence from senior advocate Rajeev Dhawan, appearing for Delhi government, the bench had asked the Haryana government to make the necessary arrangement for resumption of water supply in the capital.