Senior CITU and CPI(M) leaders later defended the auto-drivers, saying the police manhandled them and that they (the auto-drivers) had families to feed and, hence, should not be stopped from plying their autos, even if illegally! Two days later, this incident repeated itself at Salt Lake and, here too, CITU leaders defended the rogue auto drivers. They even demanded that the police inform the CITU and seek its permission before launching any drives against illegal autos. One CITU leader went as far as demanding that the permits issued by the CITU be accorded legal sanction! Given this propensity of the CITU to back rogue drivers of public transport vehicles, it would be difficult to get the polluting vehicles off Kolkata's streets.
The Gameplan
Though transport minister Subhas Chakraborty, whose opposition till date to many attempts to crack down on polluting vehicles is well-known, has promised to implement the High Court order, I'd take his assurance with a large pinch of salt. There is little doubt that Chakraborty, and his CITU friends, would try their best to sabotage a thorough cleanup. There are reports that they're backing a move by bus, taxi, truck and auto-rickshaw operators to appeal against the High Court order and go up to the apex court, if necessary, to get this week's order overturned. This, they realise, would only be a delaying tactic since the Supreme Court's views on vehicular pollution, and its orders to crackdown on polluting vehicles, is well-known. Chakraborty and the CITU realise that they can delay this issue by a couple of years at the most, but at the end of the day, there's no way the Supreme Court would be sympathetic to those who run smoke-belching vehicles.