Land Acquisition and Rehabilitation Bill

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    Fwire

    Lok Sabha passes land acquisition bill

    (Roundup)

    byF wireAug 30, 2013

    New Delhi, Aug 29 (IANS) The Lok Sabha Thursday passed the much-awaited land

    acquisition and rehabilitation bill that aims to provide fair compensation to those whose land

    is taken away, brings transparency to the process of acquisition of land to set up factories or

    buildings and assures rehabilitation of those affected. This legislation has been eagerly sought

    by both industry and those who live off the land.

    Out of the 235 members who voted on the bill, 216 backed it while 19 voted against it. Thebill aims to replace a nearly 120-year-old law enacted during British rule in 1894.

    While the Congress termed it a historic step, most parties supported it but said fertile land

    should not be acquired for industrial development. Instead, barren land should be used for the

    purpose, they said.

    It is a historic step. For the first time it brings transparency in the process of land

    acquisition, compensation and rehabilitation as a matter of right, Congress member

    Meenakshi Natrajan said while participating in the debate on the land takeover bill.

    This (the bill) is a middle path we have found. Groups were demanding separate things. It is

    wrong to say I have not consulted them, Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh said.

    Ramesh said industrial houses, political parties and civil society have also been consulted.

    Bharatiya Janata Party chiefRajnath Singhsaid: Under no circumstances should you acquire

    irrigated land and agricultural land. You should make do with wasteland,

    Parties like Communist Party India-Marxist (CPI-M), Communist Party of India, Trinamool

    Congress, Janata Dal-United (JD-U), Biju Janata Dal, Rashtriya Janata Dal, Samajwadi Party

    and Bahujan Samaj Party also said that the consent of the farmer was key in any landacquisition and suggested that fair compensation should be paid to him while demanding

    special economic zones to be included in the law.

    Dont acquire fertile land. Instead use waste land to develop industry, Samajwadi Party

    chiefMulayam Singh Yadavsaid.

    Terming the bill, which will be now called The Right to Fair Compensation and

    Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill, 2012, as anti-farmer,

    Bahujan Samaj Party member S.S. Nagar said: Change of land use is controversial point.

    Noting the SEZ was a big scam, JD-U leader Rajeev Ranjan said: It is a tooth less bill.The fertile land should not be acquired.

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    Trinamool Congress member Sudip Bandyopadhyay said the earlier draconian law was

    applied on farmers of Nandigram and Singur and how they fought under the leadership of

    Mamata Banerjeeis history.

    There was no forced acquisition in Singur and Nandigram. Not a single inch of land was

    acquired in Nandigram. There is a difference between announcement and acquiring, CPI-Mmember Basudeb Acharia said, countering the TMC charge.

    While the government moved 165 amendments, the opposition moved as many as 116

    amendments to the bill.

    A key feature of the bill is that the consent of 80 percent of land owners concerned is needed

    for acquiring land for private projects and of 70 percent landowners for public-private

    projects.

    The bill also defines public purpose to include: mining, infrastructure, defence,

    manufacturing zones, roads, railways, highways, and ports built by government and publicsector enterprises, land for project-affected people, planned development and improvement of

    village or urban sites and residential purposes for the poor and landless and government-

    administered schemes or institutions, among others.

    The bill seeks to address problems of industry regarding acquisition of land for setting up

    projects, and provides for rehabilitation and resettlement of displaced people.

    It has provisions like compensation for the owners of the acquired land to be four times the

    market value in case of rural areas and twice in case of urban areas.

    Introduced in 2011, the bill was scrutinised by parliamentary panel that submitted its report in

    May 2012.

    Indo-Asian News service

    aag/kbd/tb/rah

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