
Mumbai – Bombay High Court Upholds Renaming of Aurangabad and Osmanabad
Mumbai. The Bombay High Court on Wednesday upheld the Maharashtra government’s notifications officially renaming Aurangabad city and revenue areas to Chatrapati Sambhajinagar and Osmanabad city and revenue areas to Dharashiv respectively.
A division bench of Chief Justice Devendra Upadhyaya and Justice Arif S Doctor dismissed a batch of pleas challenging the state government’s notifications of the changed names.
The pleas, including PILs and various writ petitions, challenged the renaming of Aurangabad and Osmanabad cities as well as revenue areas (District, Sub-Division, Taluka, Villages).
The renaming of the revenue areas is governed by section 4 of the Maharashtra Land Revenue Code, 1966, which permits the State Government to alter the limits of any revenue area or abolish any such revenue area and also to name it.
On February 24, 2023, the Union ministry of home affairs approved the renaming of Aurangabad and Osmanabad cities, but the process of changing the names of the district and revenue authorities was not complete by then. The state government published a draft notification on the same day inviting objections from general public to re-naming the revenue areas of Aurangabad and Osmanabad.
The High Court on August 30, 2023 disposed of a batch of petitions contesting the proposed renaming of the revenue areas, as the new names hadn’t been formally notified. The challenge to the news names of the cities survived.
The renaming of the Aurangabad and Osmanabad revenue areas was formally notified just over two weeks later on September 15, 2023. Thereafter, new pleas were filed challenging the new names of the revenue areas.
The pleas against renaming were filed on the ground that public sentiments were not considered while taking this decision and the state violated provisions of the Constitution. It was further alleged that the name is being changed to spread hatred towards Muslims and gain political advantage.
The Maharashtra government, however, denied this contention and submitted that naming of a city on a personality held in high esteem (in case of Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar) by the entire State does not have a religious colour.
In its affidavit opposing to the PIL challenging the renaming of Osmanabad, the state government told the court that the renaming of Osmanabad city as Dharashiv was met with celebration by the majority of the city’s residents. It further claimed that this renaming neither undermined the spirit of secularism nor resulted in any communal discord.