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Rs. 170-cr. worth encroached govt. land recovered in 4 days

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The Hindu            14.10.2014  

Rs. 170-cr. worth encroached govt. land recovered in 4 days

‘Land-grabbing scam may run into Rs. 2 lakh crore’

Over the past four days, the Bangalore Urban district administration has recovered 31 acres of encroached government land worth Rs. 170 crore in different parts of the city.

This probably comes in the wake of the ongoing protest by the Anti Land-grabbing Action Committee led by freedom fighter H.S. Doreswamy, for over a month now.

While the committee claims that over 40,000 acres is estimated to be encroached in the city, according to the district administration, the extent of encroachment is around 34,111 acres. Of this, around 14,563 acres – a mere 42.7 per cent – has been recovered since 2007.

‘Action plan ready’

Additional District Commissioner R. Venkatachalapathy claimed that an action plan had been formulated to recover the remaining 19,548 acres. Though the action against encroachers coincides with the ongoing protest, he termed this as a “regular drive”, part of the action plan chalked out by the district administration.

However, critical of the government’s action in recovering the encroached land, former MLA A.T. Ramaswamy, who headed the Joint Legislature Committee on encroachment and grabbing of government land in Bangalore, said that the “recovery drive” was just a tip of the iceberg. His report on encroachments in the city was submitted to the government in 2007.

He pointed out that apart from recovering the encroachments, the government must initiate action against land sharks, who have created fake documents to claim ownership over government land. “Land sharks, politicians and bureaucrats have colluded with the government. There are many government officials who have created fake documents for land-grabbing. This scam could be worth around Rs. 2 lakh crore,” he alleged.

‘Invoke Goonda Act’

Mr. Ramaswamy said that the two special deputy commissioners recently appointed by the government have been entrusted with the investigation and identification of land-grab cases across the city. The committee has been demanding that the land-grabbers be booked under the Goonda Act and tried in special courts to be instituted once the Karnataka Land Grabbing (Prohibition) Bill is enacted.

Meanwhile, Deputy Commissioner of Bangalore (Urban) District V. Shankar claimed that the district administration has been booking criminal cases against the encroachers under the amended sections of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act and under the IPC. “We are not even sparing government officials who are found to be hand-in-glove with the encroachers,” he claimed.

 

DDA takes steps for speedy conversion of property

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The Hindu       11.10.2014

DDA takes steps for speedy conversion of property

The Delhi Development Authority has been taking various steps in order to ensure speedy disposal of conversion of property from leasehold to freehold since February this year.

The steps in this direction include setting up of Nagrik Suvidha Kendras and monitoring online disposal of conversion applications.

The DDA has opened Nagrik Suvidha Kendras in four zones of Delhi. These centres were conceptualised in February and by the first week of June, four of them were opened at Dwarka, Rohini, Laxmi Nagar and Vikas Sadan.

On completion of 100 days of these centres, the DDA said they have been working to the utmost satisfaction of the public and the disposal rate has been very high as compared to earlier manual disposals. Around 3,800 applications for conversion were received during these 100 days and 2,000 conveyance deeds have been issued within the stipulated period fixed under the Citizen Charter for disposal.

Besides, special camps were organised in the Suvidha Kendras and more than 6,000 pending applications of conversion were also disposed leaving hardly any case pending beyond 45 days, i.e., the time period given in the Citizen Charter for disposal.

“At the Suvidha Kendras, apart from conversion, mutation, mortgage permission, extension of time in construction are also being expedited. Applicants on a visit to Nagrik Suvidha Kendras are provided self-generated tokens and the applicants are directed to designated counters where application is scrutinised on the spot, challan generated and all formalities completed. The advantage of these Kendras is that applications both online and offline are received. The pendency officer-wise is periodically generated to assess the disposal rate,” DDA Vice-Chairman Balvinder Kumar said.

Mr. Kumar has been personally monitoring the pendency.

The conversion form has also been simplified and the number of documents required to be submitted by the applicant have been reduced to facilitate conversion with ease and speed.

Previously, many conversion applications were pending for want of sanctioned building plan or for want of NOC. All these requirements have been done away with subject to certain conditions as notified from time to time.

The DDA has opened Nagrik Suvidha Kendras at Dwarka, Rohini, Laxmi Nagar and Vikas Sadan

 

Solution to e-waste management in 3 city Corporations in sight

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The Hindu            11.10.2014

Solution to e-waste management in 3 city Corporations in sight

The vexed issue of e-waste management is likely to get a solution in Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram Corporations towards the end of this month and Kozhikode set to follow shortly.

Clean Kerala Company Limited (CKCL), an initiative under the Local Self-government Department, has identified a Palakkad-based agency through tendering for the collection and processing of e-waste in the private-public-participation model with zero investment to the State.

Giving a fillip to the arrangement was a government order issued on Friday authorising CKCL to collect e-waste from government bodies and public sector enterprises.

Local bodies, in association with CKCL, would identify locations for collecting e-waste from where the agency concerned would collect and transport it to its processing centre in Hyderabad.

“We are in the process of finalising locations in consultation with the two Corporations and will start operations on getting clearance from the Kerala State Pollution Control Board,” Kabeer B. Haroon, managing director, CKCL, told The Hindu .

As per the arrangement, CKCL will buy e-waste from local bodies at Rs.5 a kg and sell it to the collecting agent three to four times that rate.

Mr. Haroon said the collection and processing involving a third party was only an interim arrangement with the ultimate target being setting up a plant of its own to treat e-waste as envisaged in the last budget. “Once that happens, we would be able to double the profit through e-waste processing compared to the new arrangement,” he said.

The collection and processing system will be extended to all interested Corporations and municipalities in due course. Panchayats will also be able to avail themselves of the benefits from the system, provided a block panchayat or district panchayat takes the initiative to coordinate it.

A preliminary survey conducted has put the e-waste generation in the State at 6 to 10 tonnes a month. But that is the figure taking into account the organised sectors alone.

“The volume generated in the three Corporations would be taken as a sample for arriving at a more accurate figure based on which areas in need for collection centres will be identified,” Mr. Haroon said.


Palakkad-based agency to process e-waste

Local bodies to identify spots for collecting e-waste

 


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