India's opposition streams show rare unity, speak out against the Centre's "anti-people" land ordinance
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Sharad Yadav |
In a rare occurrence, the National Alliance of PeopleтАЩs Movements (NAPM), the apex body of tens of rights organizations, succeeded in bringing together different opposition streams in Delhi. The event was a discussion on the land ordinance promulgated by the NDA government, and how it has already begun to impact one of the most important projects being implemented тАУ of having a Greenfield capital for Andhra Pradesh following bifurcation of the state and formation of Telangana. The NAPM had called for discussion those parties which disagree with the Government of India move.
Janata Dal-United leader Sharad Yadav, speaking up on the occasion, said, the land ordinance had provided тАЬthe right ammunition for people and parties to come together against this government with authoritarian tendenciesтАЭ. Speaking in a similar tone, D Raja, Rajya Sabha MP, CPI, said тАЬauthoritarianism doesn't have a place in this countryтАЭ, promising Left support to тАЬother opposition partiesтАЭ to mobilise people against the NDA to give it a тАЬfitting replyтАЭ. CongressтАЩ Jairam Ramesh and Aam Admi PartyтАЩs Yogendra Yadav sent in their messages offering support for a united move against the ordinance.
MG Devasahayam, retired IAS official who headed the Fact Finding Team constituted by the NAPM, said the project would prove to be a тАЬwindfallтАЭ for the real estate developers. Already, a Singapore firm, he pointed out, has been given complete rights. According to him, тАЬThe Capital Sitting Committee had specified least possible dislocation to existing agricultural practices, and it did not favour a Greenfield capital, yet this was completely тАЬdisregardedтАЭ.
тАЬGuntur district near Vijaywada, has a thriving agricultural economy of Rs 1,000 crore and 120 different crop varieties. The region has 85 percent small and marginal farmers and also has women entrepreneurs who earn Rs.200-700 per day. The planned capital will take 30,000 acres of multi-crop farmland from 29 villages affecting two lakh-plus populationтАЭ, Devasahayam said, adding, тАЬThe land pooling scheme, meant to be voluntary, is being used to forcefully acquire land from farmers.тАЭ
C Ramachandraiah, Leader of Opposition, Andhra Pradesh legislative council, said that the MoU with Singapore was done тАЬwithout any knowledge to chief minister Chandrababu NaiduтАЩs own cabinet colleagues, not to talk of MLAs and MLCsтАЭ, adding, тАЬNaidu is following exactly the same style of functioning as Narendra Modi is following at the Centre.тАЭ
Ramakrishna Raju, NAPM convener, who visited the area along with K Babu Rao, senior scientist, said, тАЬFarmers and workers do not want to give land but are being coerced into doing so. More than 1,000 police personnel have been deployed in the region and people are being forced to sign away their land. Minimal cash compensation is being provided. The implicit reasoning behind the large amount of land needed is to convert it into real estate will benefit only the developers.тАЭ
Speaking on the ordinance, KB Saxena, former Secretary to the Government of India, and Usha Ramanathan, legal researcher, said that it has тАЬtaken us back to the 1894 land acquisition Act, with тАЬno system of checks and balancesтАЭ. He added, тАЬThe ordinance has diluted a range of consent provisions as well as opened up the field for all forms of private and public private partnerships. It has also taken out the provision for social impact assessmentтАЭ.
Ritwick Dutta, environmental lawyer said that the ordinance needs to be seen in conjunction with changes and dilutions in the environmental regulations as suggested by the TS Subramanian Committee. тАЬThese dilutions will have far reaching implications since they exempt almost every project from the provisions of the public hearing and consent in the name of national and strategic importanceтАЭ, he said. Others who spoke included Swami Agnivesh and senior environmentalist Vandana Shiva.
NAPM Statement
An NAPM statement said, тАЬAn immediate fallout of the ordinance is the large-scale land grab proposed in the name of development of a new Greenfield capital city of Andhra Pradesh near Vijayawada in Guntur District.тАЭ It added, тАЬChandigarh, which is the most acclaimed Greenfield capital city only, acquired less than 9000 acres in Phase 1, and less than 6000 acres in Phase 2. This low-rise-low-density city has a population of just over one million six decades after the commencement of its development.тАЭWondering what is the need for acquiring 52,000 acres, which can go up to 1 lakh acres, NAPM said, тАЬThe impression has gathered that the тАШmassive capital cityтАЩ of Andhra Pradesh and the Central ordinance give out one clear message тАУ that people's consent and rights will not be respected in order to facilitate real estate development and profit for corporate houses.тАЭ
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