Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Feb 04, 2005

News
Features
Stocks
Port Info
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Infrastructure


Poor pay the price for Mumbai's `Shanghaisation' — State adopts `double-standards' in re-sheltering slum-dwellers

Mahesh Vijapurkar

Only after about 84,000 huts were flattened by civic officials under police protection have strident voices are being raised with support from Ms Medha Patkar of Narmada Bachao Andolan.

Mumbai , Feb. 3

WHAT'S sauce for the goose is obviously not sauce for the gander. That's certainly so with slum dwellers in Mumbai where the Maharashtra Government is applying two different yardsticks to decide who should get re-housed at State expense and who should be left out in the cold.

Those who have been evicted from the route of the new, broad roads and extra railway tracks being laid to make movement easier alone are being given alternate apartments of 225 sq ft each. But those who have been bulldozed to make Mumbai shine like Shanghai — were they alone eyesores? — are being asked to fend for themselves.

Because the World Bank so stipulated, the Bank-funded infrastructure endeavour, Mumbai Urban Transport Project (MUTP) has already spent most part of the Rs 450-plus-crore on building apartments on Government land. Or else, the squatters would have had no defenders. But the others whose huts were bulldozed since mid-November 2004 have no protectors.

The number affected by the MUTP and those made homeless to make Mumbai shine like Shanghai may ultimately be alike, at about 3.5 lakh.

Only after about 84,000 huts were flattened by civic officials under police protection have strident voices are being raised with support from Ms Medha Patkar of Narmada Bachao Andolan. Even before she told the victims of the massive — and for the first time, such relentless drive to rid the city of slums — that they should return to rebuild their homes at the same spots, some 25,000 had done just that. A vexed civic corporation says it is not theirs' but the Government's job to protect cleared lands.

The backgrounds of all the migrants who colonised all vacant land, both private and public, with official and political connivance do not differ: They came to find livelihoods but not houses to live in. Of them, only those who luckily picked spots that later became the route for new, wider roads and extra railway tracks for the suburban trains are entitled to replacement housing costing over Rs 450 crore. The other squatters are the unwanted.

If the massive demolition drive targeted shanties put up after January 1,1995, those who are benefiting from the MUTP-driven housing including those who built them after that cut-off date and thus would normally be categorised "illegal."

Those built prior to 1995 alone are entitled to protection till resettlement. In the MUTP's resettlement all huts, regardless of their `legal' or `illegal' status have been treated alike. In the first 1996 base line survey, most of the potential beneficiaries were living, obviously, in pre-1995 huts but by the time they were supposed to shift , the number of those who put up their huts on those sites grew.

An official confirmed that, depending on the site, such dwellings "could be between a fifth and a third of the total. We have been flexible and people have benefited."

`Tsunami demolition': The drive which a former High Court judge, Mr Hosbet Suresh, calls "a tsunami demolition" and so far has flattened 73,500 shanties built post-1995 has no rehabilitation component at all. People left homeless are expected to move out of the city. Most continue hoping for help and remain in the open.

Some who linger on the devastated landscape, may soon be driven away in a second wave of action. The demolition drive's victims also stand to lose their right to vote because they are no longer residents of "given addresses" in the voters' lists; unless they find new ones, cannot vote.

This, however, has not triggered many protests because the priority is to find a home, not retain their voting right. And they had voted for this Government because they were promised their post-1995, but pre-2000 shanties would be protected. So what price the vote?

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page


Stories in this Section
Lottery body to protest


Kerala Budget today
Cement majors post higher shipments in Jan
Centre may take Rs 26,000-cr hit on finance panel proposals
Review forecasts marginal fall in Kerala's growth rate
Rs 30,000-cr investments to materialise this year: Oommen Chandy
`Kit pumps are a drain on power'
An ecological feat worthy of emulation
In the sands of time
Indian eco initiatives a big draw at Gulf expo
Prakriti Vandana Yatra ends
`Excise collection may not meet target'
Poor pay the price for Mumbai's `Shanghaisation' — State adopts `double-standards' in re-sheltering slum-dwellers
Hind Insecticide `move' to shift unit opposed
GSPC goes all out to strike gas in third KG well
Norms issued for competitive bidding to fix power tariff
Govt sees Rs 9 lakh cr investments in power sector by 2012
`Ten private power projects in sight of financial closure'
Sayeed hopeful of early solution to Dabhol imbroglio
Chhattisgarh set to add 11,000 MW
DVC may buy more coal from Eastern Coalfields
NTPC to import coal to tide over shortages
AP: Medicines, cement, LPG to become cheaper on VAT
KSSIA sees flaws in new VAT system
`Delay VAT implementation'
TN asked to allocate funds for powerloom park projects
SSI registrations drop in Kerala
`Softexam' IT practical test
Global leather cos keen to set up shop in India
Bio Asia meet to unveil Asian biotech union
Paint cos may pass on input cost hikes to consumers
Sell-off fund — Will it fall victim to petty politics?
`Govt will step in to meet EPF shortfall'
FDI cap hike in telecom `sends right signals'
Mauritius consortium among 24 FDI proposals cleared
Kerala cabinet clears local housing scheme
Technical meet on rubber in Pune tomorrow
Symposium on TDS
In Hyderabad today
Contributions to The Hindu Relief Fund
Nepal air connectivity restored; tourism hit
Spurious kick


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | The Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2005, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line