Evaluating the abysmal compliance, institutional apathy, and enforcement failure by the States of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh regarding rampant illegal sand mining inside a protected wildlife sanctuary, the proliferation of unregistered/unidentified vehicles, massive vacancies in frontline forest staff, and critical threats to public infrastructure.
Directions issued under Article 142 of the Constitution of India. The Supreme Court fast-tracked technology setups, mandated a crackdown on mining mafias and their unregistered vehicles, ordered immediate filling of vacancies, directed the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) to protect vulnerable bridges, and summoned further accountability from central and state ministries.
1. Introduction and Factual Background
This suo motu environmental litigation addresses rampant illegal sand mining inside the ecologically fragile National Chambal Gharial Sanctuary, which spans the states of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh. The continuous mining has severely disrupted local river morphology, fragmented wildlife habitats, and endangered protected aquatic fauna such as gharials, dolphins, and freshwater turtles.
Compounding the crisis, the Central Empowered Committee (CEC) exposed a severe breakdown of regulatory oversight on the ground:
- Thousands of unregistered and unidentified commercial vehicles and heavy earthmoving machines operate completely unchecked inside protected forest limits to transport stolen river sand.
- Indiscriminate excavation has crept dangerously close to and underneath the supporting structures and pillars of the inter-state bridge on National Highway-44 (near the Morena-Dholpur border), directly threatening its structural stability and public safety.
2. State-Wise Compliance Assessment
The Supreme Court analyzed the action reports filed by the three neighboring states and structural feedback from the NHAI:
- State of Rajasthan: The Court expressed serious displeasure with Rajasthan’s initial “abysmal state of compliance” and administrative paralysis. Following strict coercion and orders requiring the personal presence of top secretaries, the state finally cleared ₹65.47 crores for IT-enabled surveillance, deployed Armed Constabulary battalions at 40 vulnerable locations, established 24 permanent camps, and set up District Level Task Forces. However, the state’s proposed timeline of 18 to 36 months to operationalize these cameras and recruit personnel was rejected by the Court as far too slow for an ongoing ecological emergency.
- State of Uttar Pradesh: UP reported coordinated enforcement actions resulting in multiple challans against vehicles running without High Security Registration Plates (HSRP) and detailed the filing of scores of criminal chargesheets under the Mining Act in the Agra region.
- State of Madhya Pradesh: MP reported significant financial penalties recovered from errant vehicles in Morena and proposed eight static check-posts. However, the Court observed that MP totally failed to address the root issue, noting that over 250 unregistered vehicles were simply let go with nominal ₹5,000 fines, treating penal consequences merely as insignificant operational costs for organized mining networks.
- National Highways Authority of India (NHAI): The NHAI placed on record a joint technical inspection report from April 2025 stating that the NH-44 Chambal bridge’s scour levels were currently within safe design limits. The NHAI claimed its role was strictly restricted to highway maintenance within the Right of Way, while actual mining enforcement lay under state jurisdiction. The Court rejected this passive hand-washing, ruling that the NHAI has a statutory obligation to proactively safeguard public infrastructure from external structural threats.
3. Critical Systemic Failures Identified by the Court
- Frontline Vacancies: The Court highlighted an alarming, institutional deficiency: massive vacancies in critical, field-level positions like Forest Guards. In Rajasthan, no recruitment drive for Forest Guards had occurred for four years, drastically crippling physical patrolling and enforcement capabilities.
- Diminishing Environmental Flows (E-Flows): Relying on scientific assessments by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), the CEC pointed out that summer and lean-season water flows in the Chambal River have hit critically low levels over the past three decades due to upstream dams and water regulation projects, leading to habitat fragmentation for endangered species.
4. Operative Directions Issued under Article 142
To bypass administrative lethrage and ensure absolute justice, the Supreme Court issued a comprehensive set of mandatory directives:
- Staff Augmentation: The Chief Secretaries of MP, Rajasthan, and UP must immediately expedite and complete the recruitment process to fill all vacant posts for Forest Guards and frontline enforcement staff within one year.
- Surveillance Deployment: Proposed IT-enabled infrastructure, night-vision high-resolution CCTV systems, and integrated control command rooms across vulnerable routes must be fast-tracked and fully operationalized within six months.
- Vehicle Crackdown & Confiscation: Authorities must launch a aggressive crackdown against vehicles operating without registration, with fake plates, or missing number plates. Such machinery must be immediately intercepted, seized, and subjected to statutory confiscation proceedings rather than being released on petty fines.
- Targeting the Kingpins: Criminal prosecutions and financial investigations must target not just hired drivers, but the entire backing ecosystem—including vehicle owners, financiers, operators, and contractors running the organized mining networks.
- Sovereign Protection for Forest Guards: Given frequent violent attacks by mining mafias, the three states must evaluate and file status reports on implementing notifications under Section 218(3) of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (formerly Section 197 CrPC) to provide official legal protection for frontline guards taking bona fide action.
- NHAI Infrastructure Mandates: The NHAI must install high-mast, high-resolution night-vision CCTV systems covering 1 km upstream and 500 meters downstream of the NH-44 bridge and route real-time live feeds continuously to the state police and forest control rooms. Furthermore, the NHAI must establish tamper-proof fencing and protective mesh on the bridge to completely halt commuters from throwing trash and polluting the sanctuary’s riverine ecosystem.
- Environmental Flow Assessment: The Ministry of Jal Shakti, Central Water Commission (CWC), and state irrigation departments must submit exhaustive action plans regarding minimum environmental flows. No new project damaging ecological flows shall be allowed within the sanctuary, except essential drinking water pipelines.
- Local Welfare and Monitoring: States must formulate special employment and skill schemes for local youth in sensitive zones to reduce economic dependence on the mining mafia, while involving communities directly in eco-tourism and surveillance.
- High-Level Periodic Review: The Chief Secretaries of all three states must personally review enforcement progress at least once every two months and present routine status reports directly to the apex court.
5. Interlocutory Applications
- A. No. 143798 of 2026 (Conservation Action Trust): Disposed of with liberty granted to the NGO to continuously coordinate and feed critical ground insights to the Amicus Curiae.
- A. No. 143904 of 2026 (M.P. Forest Employees Association): The Court issued formal notices to MP, Rajasthan, and UP, ordering them to submit clear replies defining uniform welfare policies, insurance coverage, ex-gratia distribution, and compassionate appointments for families of frontline forest personnel killed or injured in the line of duty.
The matter stands listed for subsequent consideration on July 22, 2026.
The prompt has a definitive answer based entirely on the provided case files; standard scannable completion rules apply, concluding the response.
2026 INSC 549
“In Re: Illegal Sand Mining In The National Chambal Sanctuary And Threat To Endangered Aquatic Wildlife” (D.O.J. 26.05.2026)




