During the hearing of a PIL, a bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C Hari Shankar said the memorial was visited by people from across the world and deserved to be respected and maintained properly.
The bench even pulled up the Rajghat Samadhi Committee, entrusted with maintaining the memorial, and the Central Public Works Department (CPWD), saying they fail to perform their statutory duties.
It directed the committee members to inspect the site and and point out deficiencies.
It asked them to submit a detailed status report with regard to the work needed to be done to protect the memorial by the next date of hearing, March 6.
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The court had earlier observed that can a place of worship be kept in an "unhygienic" and "deplorable" manner.
Petitioner Shyam Narayan Chouksey claimed that the memorial "was not at all being properly and cleanly maintained", and despite being brought to the notice of the committee and Ministry of Urban Development (MoUD), there has been no change in the situation.
In the PIL, Chouksey has submitted photos of alleged deficiencies that he had come across during his visit to the monument in 2014 and then again in 2015 and 2016, when he claimed the situation had worsened.
Two toilets were in very poor condition and unclean, and at many places sewage lines are exposed and filled with garbage, becoming "breeding place for mosquitoes and other insects".