The body of Dr. Deepak Amarapukar, who had gone missing on Tuesday following heavy rains in the megapolis, was today recovered from a nullah near the Coast Guard office in central Mumbai's Worli, police said.
Amrapurkar was gastroenterologist at the city-based Bombay hospital.
The public interest litigation, filed by the Federation of Retail Traders Welfare Association Mumbai, also sought steps to ensure that such an incident is not repeated.
As per the plea, filed through advocate Ashish Mehta, in leaving the manhole open, and in failing to barricade the manhole, or put any warning signs around it, the civic body exposed "the public at large to danger," and "deprived Dr. Amrapurkar of his life".
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Besides the BMC, the plea has the chief minister, the state government, the police commissioner, and the chief engineers, sewage operation and storm water drain departments as parties in the case.
The plea also seeks that the chief minister be directed to identify the BMC officers responsible for the negligence, and "to hold the officials concernedaccountable for Dr. Amrapurkar's death".
It also urged the court to constitute "an advisory committee of ex-bureaucrats and technocrats for carrying out an inspection of all manholes in the city and to help form a policy to avoid such fatal incidents in future".
"It is apparent that only on account of the gross negligence on the part of BMC and its officers, the victim was deprived of his life," the PIL alleged
"The corporation and the state are under a legal obligation to take care of, and protect all citizens from accidents," the plea contended.
The petitioner will mention the plea before a bench led by Chief Justice Manjula Chellur on Friday.
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