THE HALFAX HEIMDALL AUGUR

2026-07-10 01:08:24 UTC
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Courts rule on land use and modular home removal in separate cases

dawngdelthindustantimes.com · 2 blocs · 15h ago

The Federal Constitutional Court barred conversion of land earmarked for a paper mill, while a High Court judge extended the timeline for dismantling illegal modular homes in Dublin.

According to Dawn, the Federal Constitutional Court ruled that land acquired for a specific public purpose cannot be converted into residential housing schemes. Dawn also reported that the land in question had been acquired for the establishment of Paper and Board Mills, and that M/s Adil International (Pvt) Ltd filed an appeal against the September 11 2024 judgment of the Peshawar High Court. The FCC bench was headed by Justice Aminuddin Khan and included Justice Ali Baqar Najafi, Dawn added.

Gdelt reported that High Court judge Richard Humphreys approved a seven‑week extension to an initially proposed six‑week remediation plan for the removal of 29 modular homes, bringing the total agreed timeframe to 13 weeks. Gdelt noted that the 29 modular homes were built without planning permission at a highly sensitive site at Brittas in south County Dublin, and that Judge Humphreys described the case as a particularly egregious case of planning law disregard.

Hindustan Times reported that the bench, consisting of justices MM Sundresh and Sheel Nagu, said “Heavens are not going to fall” if the petition is heard after the Supreme Court resumes regular functioning. The same outlet said the petitions were jointly filed by advocates Ajay Kumar Rai and Dinesh Kumar Yada.

This account was written only from facts that survived Augur's corroboration pass — 0 corroborated across opposed news blocs, 0 contested (attributed to both sides), 11 single-source (attributed). Nothing was added; no significance was inferred. Model Qwen3-Next-80B-A3B-Instruct. See the evidence & the verbatim quotes →