Govt prepares draft bill on land acquisition
Property World Bureau
July 29, 2011
To
take on the discontentment against land acquisition process, rural
development minister Jairam Ramesh has cleared a draft bill for
public comments
The minister’s land acquisition and rehabilitation bill
will be up on the ministry website just a fortnight into his term
at Krish Bhawan. The Bill proposes a compensation of more than six
times the circle rate of land, acquired for industrial and real
estate projects. This is in line with the recomendations of the
National Advisory Council but given the time constraint is unlikely
to be cleared by Parliament in the next monsoon session.
The Bill sticks to the NAC script in its other major
recommendations which is mandatory consent for atleast 80% of the
affected people as a pre-requisite for commencing land acquisition.
Since land is a concurrent subject, the Act will however have only
an advisory status unless accepted by the state legislatures.
“It would be the state government who would decide on whether
the private sector or the state government, who would initiate land
acquisition drive,” an official said. The new bill also
proposes compliance with all existing laws on tribal welfare. The
bill has also suggested inflation linked annuity to those who had
given up their land.
The bill also suggests that if the acquired land belongs to a
tribal person, then an additional compensation would have to be
worked out. Besides the Bill would also have separate norms for
land acquired around urban and rural areas. After a final meeting
with National Advisory Council (NAC) members and other key ministry
officials on Wednesday, Jairam gave the final touch to the bill
which for the first time combines both land acquisition and
rehabilitation under one law.
This would be the second attempt by the UPA government to formulate
a national policy on land acquisition after series of violent
protests against forceful occupation of land for industries were
reported from Uttar Pradesh, Orissa, West Bengal, Maharashtra and
other states in the last few years. Earlier the National
Rehabilitation and Resettlement Policy, 2007 were passed by the Lok
Sabha in February 2009 and had been tabled in the Rajya Sabha
subsequently. However, both bills lapsed with the dissolution of
the 14th Lok Sabha.