CM Karnataka: Footpath clearance upholds Supreme Court order
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Karnataka on Friday, 10 July 2026, reaffirmed that the ongoing anti-encroachment drive on Bengaluru's footpaths is being carried out in compliance with directions from the Supreme Court of India, framing the operation as a symbol of safety, discipline, and good urban governance.
The post, written in Kannada, states: 'ಫುಟ್ಪಾತ್ ಅತಿಕ್ರಮಣ ತೆರವು ಕೇವಲ ಕಾರ್ಯಾಚರಣೆ ಅಲ್ಳ' — 'Footpath encroachment removal is not merely an operation; it is a symbol of safety, discipline, and good urban governance.' The office further noted that 'safe walking is a fundamental right of every citizen' and called for the cooperation of all residents to build a safer Bengaluru.
Context
The Chief Minister's Office of Karnataka framed the clearance drive explicitly around a Supreme Court directive, signalling that the action carries judicial backing rather than being a discretionary municipal exercise. The post emphasised that public spaces must be 'returned to the public for public use' — a direct articulation of the pedestrian-rights argument that courts have long advanced.
Bengaluru, Karnataka's capital and one of India's fastest-growing metros, has long grappled with footpath encroachments by vendors, parked vehicles, and informal structures, leaving pedestrians — particularly the elderly and differently abled — with little usable pavement.
Policy Backdrop
The Supreme Court of India has issued multiple directives since the 1990s and 2000s instructing municipal bodies across the country to clear illegal occupations from public footpaths and restore pedestrian access. These orders established that the right to safe passage on public infrastructure is constitutionally grounded.
The Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), the city's civic body, has periodically conducted encroachment clearance drives — including in the early 2020s — to restore footpaths, though enforcement has historically faced challenges from re-encroachment and legal contestation by displaced vendors.
Stakeholders and Impact
Pedestrians, who bear the most direct risk from encroached pavements, stand to benefit most immediately from a sustained clearance drive. Wider footpaths improve safety for schoolchildren, senior citizens, and daily commuters navigating Bengaluru's dense neighbourhoods.
Street vendors and small businesses operating on or near footpaths, however, face displacement and loss of livelihood — a tension that urban governance experts say requires parallel rehabilitation measures. Local businesses in commercial corridors may also see mixed effects, with improved pedestrian flow potentially boosting footfall even as clearance disrupts existing informal arrangements.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to how consistently the drive is enforced across Bengaluru's multiple administrative zones and whether the BBMP files compliance affidavits before the Supreme Court to demonstrate progress. The broader test will be whether cleared pavements remain free of re-encroachment — a challenge that has historically undermined similar operations in Indian cities.
The government's invocation of a fundamental right to safe walking suggests it may seek to build a durable legal and public-opinion framework around pedestrian access, potentially setting the stage for stricter long-term enforcement policy in Karnataka's urban centres.