"My aim is to make Chennai as the most livable
and lovable city. I will continue my social work till
I achieve this end," says 'Traffic' Ramasamy,
who has fought many a legal battle for the cause of
public in the city. Battling
One of the largest filers of public interest litigation
petitions in the Madras High Court, he had single
handedly fought many cases. However, irked over this,
some of his rivals recently ransacked his office in
a bid to discourage him from going ahead with his
declared principle of making Chennai as a livable
city.
Stating that the attack did not deter him, he told
reporters that he would continue his fight.
The 73-year-old man, who started his career as a peon
in a textile mills, was one of the founders of the
Home Guard movement in the state in 1963. He started
helping the police in regulating the traffic in the
busy Parrys Corner. Appreciating his work, the police
issued him an identity card, which earned him the
name 'Traffic' Ramasamy.
This activism cost him his family life as the members
of his family disowned him, as he continued 'foolish
things' of taking up people's cause, he said.
But one of his friends offered him shelter and many
friends helped him in paying the court fee for his
cases.
Ramasamy whose full name is K R Ramaswamy, was instrumental
in getting a ban on plying of motorised fish carts
in the city in 2002 following which he was attacked
by some miscreants, damaging one of his eyes.
Again, it was he who took up the case of unauthorised
constructions in Chennai.
The Supreme Court had recently asked the Tamil Nadu
government to demolish all unauthorised constructions,
including some famous textile shops in the city. The
apex court then remarked: "Chennai has become
a unlivable city due to unauthorised buildings."
He had also challenged the state funding for a feature
film on the life Periyar E V Ramasamy, a social reformer.
The Rs 95 lakh subsidy given to the film could be
utilised for some development work, he argued. When
no advocate came forward to argue his case, he personally
appeared. But some lawyers attacked him on the court
premises itself.
He had now taken up a case for banning autorickshaws
on major bus routes to decongest the traffic. He thinks
that the recent attack on his office was by some autorickshaw
men, who thought that their livelihood would be affected
if he won the case. "But I am not going to stop
my efforts," he said.