Vijay V Singh (THE TIMES OF INDIA; September 9, 2020)

Mumbai: The Mumbai municipal corporation issued a 24-hour notice to actor Kangana Ranaut on Tuesday seeking a reply on alleged “illegal alteration and construction” within the premises of her recently renovated bungalow at Pali Hill in Bandra. The structure is a row house which has been converted into an office.

If Kangana fails to reply to the notice in 24 hours (Wednesday morning), the BMC will demolish the unauthorised portion of the bungalow, said assistant municipal commissioner (H-West ward) Vinayak Vispute. BMC has moved court asking for a hearing and to ensure ex parte orders are not issued in case Kangana approaches it to stop the demolition.

The BMC notice lists out unauthorised constructions of toilet, kitchen, pantry on the ground floor. It also mentions an unauthorised room built on the first floor using a wooden partition and illegal inclusion of a second floor balcony into habitable area. The bungalow was earlier used as a kindergarten; Kangana purchased it a few years ago. She had approached the residents’s association to inform them that after renovating the bungalow she would use it as an office-cum-home.

The actor appeared unfazed by the action. She tweeted, “Now @mybmc has filed a caveat against me, really desperate to break my house, I deeply love what I built with so much passion over so many years but know that even if you break it my spirit will only get stronger .... GO ON ...”

Kangana’s lawyer replied to the notice stating no work was being carried out on her premises as “falsely understood by you (BMC)… therefore the stop work notice’ is absolutely bad in law.”

Civic staff had carried out an inspection of the bungalow on Monday. The action, in fact, followed news of the Centre giving her Y-plus security after her tweets comparing Mumbai to Pakistan-occupied Kashmir riled the political dispensation in the state. Kangana’s comments were against Mumbai Police for its handling of the Sushant probe.

BMC’s notice to Kangana was dubbed as “politically motivated” by residents in the locality. Madhu Poplai, secretary, Pali Hill Residents' Association, said, “In the city, people always carry out some or the other alteration in their houses. If they want to act, BMC should act against all instead of targeting one person.”

Meanwhile, CRPF security was deployed at the building where Kangana lives, half a km away from the bungalow, a day ahead of her arrival in the city. The deployment was part of the new security arrangement provided by the Centre.