However, a bench headed by Justice Abhay Oka asked the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) to demolish illegal slums which have come up after year 2000.
It also directed the civic body to come out with a policy on how would it provide water supply to the illegal slums.
The bench was of the view that the manner in which water is supplied to slums should not be different from the (water supply) scheme adopted for the citizens of the city and suburbs.
The matter arose during the hearing of a public interest litigation (PIL) filed by Nivara Hakk, an NGO, for protection and preservation of open spaces in the city. It also raised an issue of illegal conversion, diversion or reduction of open spaces in the guise of slum rehabilitation.
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The PIL challenged the Government Resolution (GR) dated June 3, 1992 on the Maharashtra government policy on open spaces encroached by slums dwellers.
There is merely an area of 13.68 sq kms, which is reserved for open space for residents of Mumbai, but 5.30 sq kms out of this is encroached. So there is hardly 8.38 sq kms of area available as open space which can be used for gardens, play grounds, and recreational ground etc, said the PIL.