Justice Rajiv Shakdher, however, allowed the Delhi Race Club and an association of owners of the equines to exercise the animals, but in small groups, and listed the matter for further hearing on March 5.
The court directed the Delhi government to test all or some of the 422 horses at the club to ascertain whether any of them suffer from the disease, which has no cure or vaccine, and to place a report before it of the results.
The order came on a plea by the Delhi Race Horses Owners' Association challenging the Delhi government's February 13 communication to the race club to postpone or cancel the North India Derby horse race scheduled for February 27 as the national capital has been declared as a controlled area.
Senior advocates Rajiv Nayar and Dayan Krishnan, appearing for the association, told the court that all the 422 horses have already been tested by an accredited lab and declared free of glanders, an infection by bacterium burkholderia mallei caused by ingestion of contaminated feed or water.
The association's lawyers also contended that 11 races have already been held between December last year and February 13, "so why this sudden glanders anxiety now?"
In response, Delhi government standing counsel Ramesh Singh and additional standing counsel Naushad Ahmed Khan contended that once Delhi has been declared as a "controlled area", under the provisions of the Prevention and Control of Infectious and Contagious Diseases in Animals Act, the consequence would be a bar on holding any activity involving grouping or herding of any species of animals.
They also told the court that since January 15, 49 cases of glanders were detected and in several cases the animal had to be culled.
On January 15, a notification was issued by the Delhi government directing that no equine movement to and from the national capital was allowed for three months to check the spread of the contagious infection.
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