New Delhi: Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal was today assured by Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh of total assistance of the Central government in implementing the 'odd-even' scheme for vehicles plying in Delhi.
In a meeting that lasted around forty minutes in North Block, Kejriwal apprised Singh of the details regarding the proposed restrictions for plying of private vehicles. The chief minister later described Singh's response as “very positive”.
In the latest development, women driving alone may be kept out of the ambit of the new rules, Kejriwal indicated.
However, Singh flagged a host of concerns over the issue pertaining to exempting vehicles carrying patients, disabled persons, or being driven by working women and those driving alone, and two-wheelers.
“He (Singh) said the Centre and Delhi Police will fully support the move. He raised few concerns which we said are being mulled over like exempting patients, single woman or if a woman is driving alone how to ensure her safety. They could and may be exempted with other cases of emergency as per the viewpoint that is emerging,” Kejriwal told reporters.
Government sources said that the final blueprint of the proposal may have significant changes and that the decision may go in the favour of women.
The Home Minister further underscored that 57 lakh out of 88 lakh vehicles (65 per cent) registered in Delhi are two-wheelers. Meanwhile, Kejriwal said that “official vehicles will also be covered” under the odd-even number plate policy.
“The Home Minister stated that the Government of India would cooperate in implementing the proposed scheme and would ask Delhi Police to enforce it in the best possible manner,” an official statement from the North Block said.
“I will follow, my ministers will follow. We will go for car pooling. Some ministers live near my house and we will follow that I think that is the only practical solution to the problem. Our officers will do it,” Kejriwal later said at a book launch function.
Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia and Delhi Home Minister Satyendar Jain were also present in the meeting where Kejriwal raised the issue of installation of CCTV cameras across Delhi as well.
“We will be needing the police's help in the case of CCTV cameras as well because ultimately the feed will go directly to them. The issue is in Delhi High Court now and there is needless bickering. We will together work this out,” Kejriwal said.
Asked whether his government was diluting the scheme in the face of criticism as it did not have a well-prepared scheme, Kejriwal said, “We had one option that we would continue doing homework for the next two years even as children would continue to die and cough. I would continue to cough as well.”
The city government on Friday, in a radical step to curb air pollution, had announced that private vehicles bearing odd and even registration numbers will be allowed to ply only on alternate days starting January 1.