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Under threat: Lush green fields |
A fact-finding team set up by the National Alliance of Peopleโs Movements (NAPM) on the proposed capital region of Andhra Pradesh has concluded that โthere is no rationale for acquiring land to the extent of land 52,000 to 1 lakh acres, as per various pronouncements, from an area which has โdiverse and prosperous agricultureโ. Pointing out that โa very disturbing game of real estate speculation and land sale has been unleashedโ, Contending that this "defies all imaginationโ, the team said, in the first phase, only 9000 acres were acquired for Chandigarh, and another 6000 acres were acquired for second phase.
Not just this, the team in its report said, โThese two phases have taken more than 50 years for implementationโ, adding, โExperience of Chandigarh shows that, after 60 years, the population has grown only to 12 lakh.โ Then, another city, which was developed on similar lines, Gandhinagar, took 20 years to grow to its current stage, with a population of just 2.5 lakh. NAPM, which sponsored the study, is one of Indiaโs largest network of rights-based organization.
Referring to the area where the new capital region is proposed, the team said, the whole idea looks particularly strange when one of the nearby cities, Vijayawada, encompasses 15,500 acres, and another city, Guntur, has 13,000 acres. Given this framework, the team said, โThere is absolutely no reason for the new capital area to have an area beyond a couple of thousand acres.โ
What provides credence to the team is, it was headed by MG Devasahayam, retired IAS bureaucrat who was administrator-cum-estate officer of the Chandigarh Capital Project. The team also included Bhupathiraju Ramakrishnam Raju, national convenor of NAPM, P Chenniah, leader of Andhra Pradesh Vyavasaya Vruttidarula Union, and Prof Babu Rao, eminent environmental expert and retired professor from Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (IICT).
Pointing out that team is โhighly disturbed by the approach of the Andhra Pradesh government in proceeding with the capital region identification and development without any due process and legal basisโ, the team said, the state government, in fact, is involved in spreading โconfusion, fear and tension among the residents of the 29 villages whose names have been announced.โ
The team visited several of the affected villages, -- Undavalli and Penumaka villages (Tadepalli Mandal); Krishnayapalem, Nidamarru, Koragal and Neerukonda (Mangalagiri Mandal); Venkatapalem, Mandadam, Malkapuram, Uddandayyapalem, Lingayapalem, Rayapudi, Peddaparimi, Vaddamanu and Tullur (Tullur Mandal).
โThe villages marked for the capital region include two kinds of villages โ one with irrigated multi-crop land within 2 km from the river and another with mostly rainfed land. All the villages have a vibrant agricultural economy of Rs1,000 crore per year, with complete linkages from farm to market, and large sections of people deriving livelihoods โ including land owners, sharecroppers, tenant farmers and agricultural workersโ, the team in its report said.
โThis is an area of the best soil and climatic conditions, and the richest diversity of more than 120 crops. More than 1 lakh working persons are earning secure livelihood from agriculture in these villages, including the residents and external labour. Drastic urbanization of this area will adversely impact food security of the stateโ, it added.
Criticizing the government for talking about โland-poolingโ, the team said, โThere is no clear understanding among the people about the terms on which their land will be taken and what benefits they will get. Some political leaders have told the farmers that pooling system is final, and that if the farmers do not agree to the pooling, either their land will be compulsorily acquired or their lands will be declared as โgreen beltโ after which they will never be able to develop the land or sell the same.โ
It added, โMost of the information that the villagers have is coming from real estate agents leading to a sudden boom in the land rates and sale of more than 3,500 acres in a month involving more than Rs 4,000 crore. All this has created a mindset of uncertainty, confusion and fear among the villagers about their future.โ
The team regretted, โEven the most basic requirement of preparing a feasibility report has not been done. The only existing law which governs the acquisition of land is the Land Acquisition Act, 2013. This Act can be used only for public purpose, and commercial land development and city development is not considered public purpose. Even for public purpose, acquisition of irrigated, multi-crop land is prohibited except under exceptional circumstances when there is absolutely no alternative.โ
โIt is to be noted that under the new Land Acquisition Act, every person whose livelihood is impacted by the project should be considered as project-affected person and duly compensated before land can be acquired by the government. The governmentโs emphasis on land-pooling seems to be a systematic attempt to avoid any compensation to the entire sections of people engaged in agricultural labour and other occupations, thereby undermining the letter and spirit of the Land Acquisition Actโ, the team said.
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