Around 450 girl students of the Rani Jhansi School and Government Girls Senior Secondary School, run by the city administration, were hospitalised on May 6 after toxic fumes spread in the surrounding areas due to the leakage.
Most of the students, who complained of irritation in the eyes and breathlessness, were discharged after a few hours but a few had to be kept under observation for a longer time.
A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar granted the last opportunity to the Environment Ministry to file response to the report of the AIIMS panel, formed by the Centre after the incident.
Advocate Sanjay Upadhyay, who had filed a plea seeking shifting of the container depot, filed maps of four major rail routes of railways showing those routes on which container trains ply from the ports on the western coast of the country for entry of goods not destined to Delhi.
The lawyer said the non-destined goods were being brought to the Tughlaqabad depot despite the fact that alternative container depots were in existence which were equally capable of handling these goods.
Earlier, the green panel had directed Dr Y K Gupta, head of the Pharmacology Department of AIIMS, to file the complete report based on his visit to the place. It had also asked the AIIMS to submit a supplementary report and inform about the health of the affected children.
The expert panel of All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) had earlier said that the residents of the Tughlaqabad area were "sitting on a (ticking) bomb" and opined that the inland container depot should be relocated.
The tribunal had also directed officials from MoEF, Central Pollution Control Board, department of industries in Haryana and the state pollution control board to conduct a joint inspection of the Sonepat-based agro-chemical company Crystal Crop Protection Pvt Ltd which was the consignee of the leaked 2- chloromethyl- 5 (chloromethyl) in the case.
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