The comments come in the wake of a Supreme Court order directing the deactivation of a BSNL tower in Gwalior on the plea of a 42-year-old cancer patient.
"This is not the final order and it needs to be seen in that perspective. Let the final order come...
"Secondly, (given) the research so far, including by World Health Organisation and even studies conducted in India by various institutions...I understand there is no ill effect of such (electromagnetic) radiation on the health of humans," Sinha said on the sidelines of a CII event here.
"So there is no need to worry or be concerned on the directions. Government is looking into it," he added.
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After the order, industry body Cellular Operators Association of India had said mobile towers emit a low level of radiation within the prescribed norms and are "completely safe".
"...Citizens have no reason to panic as mobile towers emit low level radiation, which is within the prescribed Department of Telecom, Government of India norms which makes mobile towers completely safe," COAI Director-General Rajan Mathews had said in a statement last week.
"The situation is continuously improving. In the last six months, nearly 2.50 lakh BTSs (Base Transceiver Stations, or mobile towers) have been installed and there is no scarcity of spectrum. I feel that the situation will improve further in the coming days," he said.
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