This is an archive article published on January 31, 2009
Now,no identity proof required
After Below Poverty Line (BPL) cards,the state government decided to do away with the mandatory identity proof for slum-dwellers to get land ownership.
Written by Lalmani Verma
Lucknow | January 31, 2009 03:40 AM IST
3 min read
Whatsapp
twitter
Facebook
Reddit
After Below Poverty Line (BPL) cards,the state government decided to do away with the mandatory identity proof for slum-dwellers to get land ownership.
Now,just a statement from a neighbour identifying a beneficiary and the duration of the concerned persons stay in the slum would be sufficient to hand over the land ownership rights to the dwellers.
These decisions were taken keeping in mind that most slum-dwellers did not have either the BPL card or any identity proof like the Election Commission photo-identity card.
Story continues below this ad
The scheme Sarvajan Hitay Garib Avas Malikana Haq Yojna was announced by Chief Minister Mayawati on her 53rd birthday on January 15.
According to the scheme,people living in slums on government lands possessing houses of 30 square metre are entitled to ownership rights at a nominal rate of Rs 20 per metre.
Survey teams,which visited the slums to compile the list of beneficiaries,found a very small percentage of slum-dwellers barely had houses of maximum 33 square metre. These teams can allow an exemption of 10 per cent excess area.
For instance,of the 3,200 families in Iradat Nagar slum,the Lucknow Development Authoritys (LDA) team found only 154 families eligible.
Story continues below this ad
Similar was the situation at Janta Nagari,a slum in the Chowk area. Among the 2,000 families,only 204 qualified.
Camps will be organised in the slums on Saturday where the selected beneficiaries can deposit money to get their ownership rights,said Yogesh Pathak,LDA executive engineer,who headed the survey team at Janta Nagari.
Interestingly,many of the slum-dwellers had motorcycles,televisions,washing machines and air coolers,which the survey teams overlooked and included the owners in their lists.
The slum-dwellers,who had houses bigger than 33 square metre,wondered as to what would happen to them. Most of them had a common question: will their houses be demolished?
Story continues below this ad
But the LDA officials had no answer. Houses of area up to 33 square metre are being considered. A decision about others may be taken by the government after February 10, said an official.
Under Secretary of Housing Hari Prasad Singh said the survey had almost completed in most places and reports have started coming in,but the compilation of data will take some time.
Lalmani is an Assistant Editor with The Indian Express, and is based in New Delhi. He covers politics of the Hindi Heartland, tracking BJP, Samajwadi Party, BSP, RLD and other parties based in UP, Bihar and Uttarakhand. Covered the Lok Sabha elections of 2014, 2019 and 2024; Assembly polls of 2012, 2017 and 2022 in UP along with government affairs in UP and Uttarakhand. ... Read More